Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.3.2.19 (ubiquitin-protein ligase)
799 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The androgen receptor (AR) N-terminal domain plays a critical role in androgen-responsive gene regulation. A novel AR N-terminal-interacting protein (ARNIP) was isolated using the yeast two-hybrid system and its interaction with amino acids 11-172 of the normal or corresponding region of the polyglutamine-expanded human AR confirmed by glutathione S-transferase pulldown assays. ARNIP cDNAs cloned from NSC-34 (mouse neuroblastoma/spinal cord) or PC-3 (human prostate adenocarcinoma) mRNA encoded highly homologous 30 kDa (261 amino acids) cysteine-rich proteins with a RING-H2 (C3H2C3 zinc finger) domain; this motif is highly conserved in predicted ARNIP-homologous proteins from several other species. Expression of the approximately 1.7 kb ARNIP mRNA was detected in various tissues by Northern blotting, but was highest in mouse testes, kidney and several neuronal cell lines. In addition, the human ARNIP protein was found to be encoded by nine exons spanning 32 kb on chromosome 4q21. In COS-1 cells, coexpression of ARNIP and AR did not affect AR ligand-binding kinetics, nor did ARNIP act as a coactivator or corepressor in transactivation assays. However, AR N-terminal:C-terminal interaction was reduced in the presence of ARNIP. Intriguingly, ARNIP, and in particular its RING-H2 domain, functioned as a ubiquitin-protein ligase in vitro in the presence of a specific ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, Ubc4-1. Mutation of a single cysteine residue in the ARNIP RING-H2 domain (Cys145Ala) abolished this E3 ubiquitin ligase activity. Fluorescent protein tagging studies revealed that AR-ARNIP interaction was hormone-independent in COS-1 cells, and suggest that colocalization of both AR and ARNIP to the nucleus upon androgen addition may allow ARNIP to play a role in nuclear processes. Thus, identification of a novel AR-interacting protein with ubiquitin ligase activity will stimulate further investigation into the role of ubiquitination and the ubiquitin-proteasome system in AR-mediated cellular functions.
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PMID:Cloning and characterization of an androgen receptor N-terminal-interacting protein with ubiquitin-protein ligase activity. 1220 Feb 28

It is established that neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) is ubiquitylated and proteasomally degraded. The proteasomal degradation of nNOS is enhanced by suicide inactivation of nNOS or by the inhibition of hsp90, which is a chaperone found in a native complex with nNOS. In the current study, we have examined whether CHIP, a chaperone-dependent E3 ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligase that is known to ubiquitylate other hsp90-chaperoned proteins, could act as an ubiquitin ligase for nNOS. We found with the use of HEK293T or COS-7 cells and transient transfection methods that CHIP overexpression causes a decrease in immunodetectable levels of nNOS. The extent of the loss of nNOS is dependent on the amount of CHIP cDNA used for transfection. Lactacystin (10 microM), a selective proteasome inhibitor, attenuates the loss of nNOS in part by causing the nNOS to be found in a detergent-insoluble form. Immunoprecipitation of the nNOS and subsequent Western blotting with an anti-ubiquitin IgG shows an increase in nNOS-ubiquitin conjugates because of CHIP. Moreover, incubation of nNOS with a purified system containing an E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme, an E2 ubiquitin carrier protein conjugating enzyme (UbcH5a), CHIP, glutathione S-transferase-tagged ubiquitin, and an ATP-generating system leads to the ubiquitylation of nNOS. The addition of purified hsp70 and hsp40 to this in vitro system greatly enhances the amount of nNOS-ubiquitin conjugates, suggesting that CHIP is an E3 ligase for nNOS whose action is facilitated by (and possibly requires) its interaction with nNOS-bound hsp70.
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PMID:Ubiquitylation of neuronal nitric-oxide synthase by CHIP, a chaperone-dependent E3 ligase. 1546 72