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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The reversible conjugation of the small
ubiquitin
-related modifier (SUMO) peptide to protein substrates (sumoylation) is emerging as a major post-translational regulatory process in animals and other eukaryotes, including plants. Database annotation, and genetic and biochemical analyses indicate that components of the SUMO conjugation and deconjugation systems are conserved in plants such as Arabidopsis, rice, tomato, and Medicago. Specifically, Arabidopsis AtSUMO1/2 and SUMO E2 conjugation enzyme AtSCE1a are implicated in abscisic acid (ABA) responses and the
ubiquitin
-like SUMO protease 1 (ULP1) AtESD4 in flowering time regulation. The AtSIZ1 SUMO E3 ligase functions in phosphate
starvation
responses, cold tolerance, basal thermotolerance, salicylic acid (SA)-dependent pathogen defense, and flowering time regulation. Following is a brief overview of the current understanding of SUMO conjugation and deconjugation determinants, and biological processes that are regulated in plants.
...
PMID:Sumoylation, a post-translational regulatory process in plants. 1772 Jun 13
The general amino acid permease (Gap1p) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a broad range, low affinity permease that imports amino acids in cells growing on poor nitrogen sources. This permease also signals the presence of amino acids through the fermentable growth medium pathway allowing the cell to respond to new sources of nitrogen in the surrounding medium. Yeast with an activated Ras2/cAMP pathway show many phenotypes indicative of altered nitrogen uptake and metabolism; sensitivity to nitrogen
starvation
, low amino acid pools. We have shown that Gap1p activity is lowered in cells with an activated RAS2(val19) allele or elevated cAMP levels whereas cells with inactive ras2 allele lose ammonia repression of Gap1p-mediated transport. This regulation is through a post-transcriptional mechanism; transcription of GAP1 is not affected by cAMP level. A mechanism by which the Ras2/cAMP/PKA pathway controls the
ubiquitin
-dependent degradation of Gap1p is most consistent with the data.
...
PMID:Amino acid transport through the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Gap1 permease is controlled by the Ras/cAMP pathway. 1791 65
Based on a functional categorization, proteins may be grouped into three types and sorted to either the proteasome or the macroautophagy pathway for degradation. The two pathways are mechanistically connected but their capacity seems different. Macroautophagy can degrade all forms of misfolded proteins whereas proteasomal degradation is likely limited to soluble ones. Unlike the bulk protein degradation that occurs during
starvation
, autophagic degradation of misfolded proteins can have a degree of specificity, determined by
ubiquitin
modification and the interactions of p62/SQSTM1 and HDAC6. Macroautophagy is initiated in response to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress caused by misfolded proteins, via the ER-activated autophagy (ERAA) pathway, which activates a partial unfolded protein response involving PERK and/or IRE1, and a calcium-mediated signaling cascade. ERAA serves the function of mitigating ER stress and suppressing cell death, which may be explored for controlling protein conformational diseases. Conversely, inhibition of ERAA may be explored for sensitizing resistant tumor cells to cytotoxic agents.
...
PMID:Sorting, recognition and activation of the misfolded protein degradation pathways through macroautophagy and the proteasome. 1798 70
Autophagy allows cell survival during
starvation
through the bulk degradation of proteins and organelles by lysosomal enzymes. However, the mechanisms responsible for the induction and regulation of the autophagy program are poorly understood. Here we show that the FoxO3 transcription factor, which plays a critical role in muscle atrophy, is necessary and sufficient for the induction of autophagy in skeletal muscle in vivo. Akt/PKB activation blocks FoxO3 activation and autophagy, and this effect is not prevented by rapamycin. FoxO3 controls the transcription of autophagy-related genes, including LC3 and Bnip3, and Bnip3 appears to mediate the effect of FoxO3 on autophagy. This effect is not prevented by proteasome inhibitors. Thus, FoxO3 controls the two major systems of protein breakdown in skeletal muscle, the
ubiquitin
-proteasomal and autophagic/lysosomal pathways, independently. These findings point to FoxO3 and Bnip3 as potential therapeutic targets in muscle wasting disorders and other degenerative and neoplastic diseases in which autophagy is involved.
...
PMID:FoxO3 controls autophagy in skeletal muscle in vivo. 1805 11
Autophagy, the lysosomal degradation and recycling of self material, has been implicated in a number of developmental and pathological conditions including aging, cancer, neurodegeneration, and insect metamorphosis. Surprisingly, Atg7 mutant flies are able to complete metamorphosis with only a slight delay, despite strongly reduced autophagy levels. Similarly, developmental elimination of the larval midgut proceeds with normal morphology, suggesting that animals can compensate for reduced autophagy during development. Atg7 mutant adults are hypersensitive to
starvation
and oxidative stress, live shorter, and accumulate
ubiquitin
- positive aggregates in the brain that lead to a progressive decline of neuronal function and cell death. These results suggest that in Drosophila, normal levels of autophagy may play a more important role in the homeostasis of certain terminally differentiated cells and stress survival than during development.
...
PMID:Drosophila Atg7: required for stress resistance, longevity and neuronal homeostasis, but not for metamorphosis. 1821 96
During pathophysiological muscle wasting, a family of
ubiquitin
ligases, including muscle RING-finger protein-1 (MuRF1), has been proposed to trigger muscle protein degradation via ubiquitination. Here, we characterized skeletal muscles from wild-type (WT) and MuRF1 knockout (KO) mice under amino acid (AA) deprivation as a model for physiological protein degradation, where skeletal muscles altruistically waste themselves to provide AAs to other organs. When WT and MuRF1 KO mice were fed a diet lacking AA, MuRF1 KO mice were less susceptible to muscle wasting, for both myocardium and skeletal muscles. Under AA depletion, WT mice had reduced muscle protein synthesis, while MuRF1 KO mice maintained nonphysiologically elevated levels of skeletal muscle protein de novo synthesis. Consistent with a role of MuRF1 for muscle protein turnover during
starvation
, the concentrations of essential AAs, especially branched-chain AAs, in the blood plasma significantly decreased in MuRF1 KO mice under AA deprivation. To clarify the molecular roles of MuRF1 for muscle metabolism during wasting, we searched for MuRF1-associated proteins using pull-down assays and mass spectrometry. Muscle-type creatine kinase (M-CK), an essential enzyme for energy metabolism, was identified among the interacting proteins. Coexpression studies revealed that M-CK interacts with the central regions of MuRF1 including its B-box domain and that MuRF1 ubiquitinates M-CK, which triggers the degradation of M-CK via proteasomes. Consistent with MuRF1's role of adjusting CK activities in skeletal muscles by regulating its turnover in vivo, we found that CK levels were significantly higher in the MuRF1 KO mice than in WT mice. Glucocorticoid modulatory element binding protein-1 and 3-hydroxyisobutyrate dehydrogenase, previously identified as potential MuRF1-interacting proteins, were also ubiquitinated MuRF1-dependently. Taken together, these data suggest that, in a multifaceted manner, MuRF1 participates in the regulation of AA metabolism, including the control of free AAs and their supply to other organs under catabolic conditions, and in the regulation of ATP synthesis under metabolic-stress conditions where MuRF1 expression is induced.
...
PMID:Muscle RING-finger protein-1 (MuRF1) as a connector of muscle energy metabolism and protein synthesis. 1822 70
Autophagy is an important intracellular recycling system in eukaryotes that utilizes small vesicles to traffic cytosolic proteins and organelles to the vacuole for breakdown. Vesicle formation requires the conjugation of the two
ubiquitin
-fold polypeptides ATG8 and ATG12 to phosphatidylethanolamine and the ATG5 protein, respectively. Using Arabidopsis thaliana mutants affecting the ATG5 target or the ATG7 E1 required to initiate ligation of both ATG8 and ATG12, we previously showed that the ATG8/12 conjugation pathways together are important when plants encounter nutrient stress and during senescence. To characterize the ATG12 conjugation pathway specifically, we characterized a null mutant eliminating the E2-conjugating enzyme ATG10 that, similar to plants missing ATG5 or ATG7, cannot form the ATG12-ATG5 conjugate. atg10-1 plants are hypersensitive to nitrogen and carbon
starvation
and initiate senescence and programmed cell death (PCD) more quickly than wild type, as indicated by elevated levels of senescence- and PCD-related mRNAs and proteins during carbon
starvation
. As detected with a GFP-ATG8a reporter, atg10-1 and atg5-1 mutant plants fail to accumulate autophagic bodies inside the vacuole. These results indicate that ATG10 is essential for ATG12 conjugation and that the ATG12-ATG5 conjugate is necessary to form autophagic vesicles and for the timely progression of senescence and PCD in plants.
...
PMID:The ATG12-conjugating enzyme ATG10 Is essential for autophagic vesicle formation in Arabidopsis thaliana. 1824 58
The white rot fungus Trametes versicolor is an efficient lignin degrader with ecological significance and industrial applications. Lignin-modifying enzymes of white rot fungi are mainly produced during secondary metabolism triggered in these microorganisms by nutrient deprivation. Selective
ubiquitin
/proteasome-mediated proteolysis is known to play a crucial role in the response of cells to various stresses such as nutrient limitation, heat shock, and heavy metal exposure. Previous studies from our laboratory demonstrated that proteasomal degradation of intracellular proteins is involved in the regulation of laccase, a major ligninolytic enzyme of T. versicolor, in response to cadmium. In the present study, it was found that the 6-h nitrogen
starvation
leads to depletion of intracellular free
ubiquitin
pool in T. versicolor. The difference in the intracellular level of free monomeric
ubiquitin
observed between the mycelium extract from the nitrogen-deprived and that from the nitrogen-sufficient culture was accompanied by the different pattern of
ubiquitin
-dependent degradation. Furthermore, it was found that nitrogen deprivation affected 26S proteasome activities of T. versicolor. Proteasome inhibition by lactacystin beta-lactone, a highly specific agent, increased laccase activity in nitrogen-deprived cultures, but not in nitrogen-sufficient cultures. The present study implicates the
ubiquitin
/proteasome-mediated proteolytic pathway in the response of T. versicolor to nitrogen deprivation.
...
PMID:The role of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in the response of the ligninolytic fungus Trametes versicolor to nitrogen deprivation. 1827 47
The trophozoite of Acanthamoeba transforms into a cyst, the resistant form under harmful environments such as
starvation
, cold and certain chemicals used in medical treatment. To investigate the factors mediating encystation, ESTs of encystation-induced A. castellanii were analysed and compared to those of trophozoites. Each EST was compared by the predicted proteins from the ESTs, to the cyst and the trophozoite by reciprocal BLAST analysis, KOG assignment, and gene annotation. In addition to the genes previously reported to encystation mediate such as cyst specific protein 21, protein kinase C, proteasome and heat shock protein, several genes like cullin 4, autophage protein 8 and
ubiquitin
-conjugating enzymes were identified to be related to encystation. Five kinds of proteinase genes were detected in cyst ESTs. The information of the genes expressed during encystation may open the way to further study on differentiation and resistance of cyst-forming pathogenic protozoa.
...
PMID:Acanthamoeba castellanii: gene profile of encystation by ESTs analysis and KOG assignment. 1828 Apr 71
In mammals, the
ubiquitin
-proteasome proteolytic pathway is a major route of protein degradation and has been shown to be regulated by the feeding status via the protein kinase B (PKB)-Forkehead box-O transcription factor signaling pathway-mediated transcription regulation of atrophy-related
ubiquitin
ligases, atrogin1 and muscle RING finger 1. In contrast, in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), the activity of the proteasome in muscle was not affected during
starvation
-induced muscle degradation. The aim of this study was therefore to explore the molecular basis for this lack of induction of this proteolytic route during
starvation
. In this study, rainbow trout were food deprived for 7 and 14 d, refed ad libitum, and the effect of the nutritional status was assessed on the different steps involved in the regulation of the
ubiquitin
-proteasome system in muscle. We observed that
starvation
reduced the phosphorylation of PKB and enhanced the expression of atrogin1 in muscle, whereas refeeding led to the opposite effects. The level of polyubiquitinated proteins in muscle increased to over 2 times the initial value on d 0 after 14 d of
starvation
and decreased significantly at 12 h after refeeding, but there were no major changes in the activity of the main proteasomal peptidases (chymotrypsin-like and trypsin-like). Altogether, these results indicate that in rainbow trout muscle, the polyubiquitination step of the
ubiquitin
-proteasome route is regulated by the feeding status similarly to what is observed in mammals.
...
PMID:Feeding status regulates the polyubiquitination step of the ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent proteolysis in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) muscle. 1828 54
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