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Query: UNIPROT:P62988 (Ubiquitin)
4,326 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The 26 S proteasome is a large protease complex that catalyzes the degradation of both native and misfolded proteins. These proteins are known to interact with PA700, the regulatory subcomplex of the 26 S proteasome, via a covalently attached polyubiquitin chain. Here we provide evidence for an additional ubiquitin-independent mode of substrate recognition by PA700. PA700 prevents the aggregation of three incompletely folded, nonubiquitinated substrates: the DeltaF-508 mutant form of cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator, nucleotide binding domain 1, insulin B chain, and citrate synthase. This function does not require ATP hydrolysis. The stoichiometry required for this function, the effect of PA700 on the lag phase of aggregation, and the temporal specificity of PA700 in this process all indicate that PA700 interacts with a subpopulation of non-native conformations that is either particularly aggregation-prone or nucleates misassociation reactions. The inhibition of off-pathway self-association reactions is also reflected in the ability of PA700 to promote refolding of citrate synthase. These results provide evidence that, in addition to binding polyubiquitin chains, PA700 contains a site(s) that recognizes and interacts with misfolded or partially denatured polypeptides. This feature supplies an additional level of substrate specificity to the 26 S proteasome and a means by which substrates are maintained in a soluble state until refolding or degradation is complete.
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PMID:Recognition of misfolding proteins by PA700, the regulatory subcomplex of the 26 S proteasome. 1068 37

Ubiquitin (Ub) modification of different proteins plays an important role in many cellular processes. However, the best studied function of Ub is the labeling of proteins committed to rapid degradation, by an ATP-dependent pathway. We previously found that this pathway is operative in the central nervous system (CNS) of adult rats (Adamo et al. [1994] J. Neurosci. Res. 38:358-364). In the present study, we examined the changes in the capacity to form high-molecular-weight Ub protein conjugates (UbPC) and the changes in the production of 2-thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), in the content of protein-associated carbonyl groups (PAC), and in the activity of glutamine synthetase produced by in vitro peroxidation of the cell cytosolic proteins and of the mitochondrial fraction isolated from rat brain. Under these experimental conditions, there was an increase in PAC and TBARS in the cytosol, indicating that damage to certain cellular components had occurred. Simultaneously there was a marked increase in UbPC in comparison with the nonoxidized controls. These conjugates showed an active turnover and accumulated when Ub-mediated proteolysis was inhibited. In vitro peroxidation of the mitochondrial fractions resulted in an increase in the production of PAC and in an enhancement in the formation of UbPC. These results demonstrate that the oxidized proteins can be recognized by the ubiquitylating system and that in the CNS the Ub-dependent proteolytic pathway is one of the possible mechanisms involved in the removal of cytosolic and mitochondrial fraction damaged proteins.
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PMID:Effect of oxidant systems on the ubiquitylation of proteins in the central nervous system. 1072 62

It is established that suicide inactivation of neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) with guanidine compounds, or inhibition of the hsp90-based chaperone system with geldanamycin, leads to the enhanced proteolytic degradation of nNOS. This regulated proteolysis is mediated, in part, by the proteasome. We show here with the use of human embryonic kidney 293 cells transfected with nNOS that inhibition of the proteasome with lactacystin leads to the accumulation of immunodetectable higher molecular mass forms of nNOS. Some of these higher molecular mass forms were immunoprecipitated by an anti-ubiquitin antibody, indicating that they are nNOS-polyubiquitin conjugates. Moreover, the predominant nNOS-ubiquitin conjugate detected in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, as well as in rat brain cytosol, migrates on SDS-polyacrylamide gels with a mobility near that for the native monomer of nNOS and likely represents a conjugate containing a few or perhaps one ubiquitin. Studies in vitro with the use of (125)I-ubiquitin and reticulocyte extracts could mimic this ubiquitination reaction, which was dependent on ATP. The heme-deficient monomeric form of nNOS is preferentially ubiquitinated over that of the heme-sufficient functionally active homodimer. Thus, we have shown for the first time that ubiquitination of nNOS occurs and is likely involved in the regulated proteolytic removal of non-functional enzyme.
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PMID:Ubiquitination of neuronal nitric-oxide synthase in vitro and in vivo. 1075 85

The 26S proteasome is a self-compartmentalizing protease responsible for the degradation of intracellular proteins. This giant intracellular protease is formed by several subunits arranged into two 19S polar caps-where protein recognition and ATP-dependent unfolding occur-flanking a 20S central barrel-shaped structure with an inner proteolytic chamber. Proteins targeted to the 26S proteasome are conjugated with a polyubiquitin chain by an enzymatic cascade before delivery to the 26S proteasome for degradation into oligopeptides. As a self-compartmentalizing protease, the 26S proteasome circumvents proteins not destined for degradation and can be deployed to the cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments. The 26S proteasome is a representative of emerging group of giant proteases, including tricorn protease, multicorn protease, and TPPII (tripeptidyl peptidase II).
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PMID:The 26S proteasome: ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis in the tunnel. 1098 10

Ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis is catalyzed by the 26S proteasome, a dynamic complex of 32 different proteins whose mode of assembly and mechanism of action are poorly understood, in part due to the difficulties encountered in purifying the intact complex. Here we describe a one-step affinity method for purifying intact 26S proteasomes, 19S regulatory caps, and 20S core particles from budding yeast cells. Affinity-purified 26S proteasomes hydrolyze both model peptides and the ubiquitinated Cdk inhibitor Sic1. Affinity purifications performed in the absence of ATP or presence of the poorly hydrolyzable analog ATP-gamma-S unexpectedly revealed that a large number of proteins, including subunits of the skp1-cullin-F-box protein ligase (SCF) and anaphase-promoting complex (APC) ubiquitin ligases, copurify with the 19S cap. To identify these proteasome-interacting proteins, we used a recently developed method that enables the direct analysis of the composition of large protein complexes (DALPC) by mass spectrometry. Using DALPC, we identified more than 24 putative proteasome-interacting proteins, including Ylr421c (Daq1), which we demonstrate to be a new subunit of the budding yeast 19S cap, and Ygr232w (Nas6), which is homologous to a subunit of the mammalian 19S cap (PA700 complex). Additional PIPs include the heat shock proteins Hsp70 and Hsp82, the deubiquitinating enzyme Ubp6, and proteins involved in transcriptional control, mitosis, tubulin assembly, RNA metabolism, and signal transduction. Our data demonstrate that nucleotide hydrolysis modulates the association of many proteins with the 26S proteasome, and validate DALPC as a powerful tool for rapidly identifying stoichiometric and substoichiometric components of large protein assemblies.
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PMID:Proteasomal proteomics: identification of nucleotide-sensitive proteasome-interacting proteins by mass spectrometric analysis of affinity-purified proteasomes. 1102 46

The 26S proteasome is the chief site of regulatory protein turnover in eukaryotic cells. It comprises one 20S catalytic complex (composed of four stacked rings of seven members) and two axially positioned 19S regulatory complexes (each containing about 18 subunits) that control substrate access to the catalytic chamber. In most cases, targeting to the 26S proteasome depends on tagging of the substrate with a specific type of polyubiquitin chain. Recognition of this signal is followed by substrate unfolding and translocation, which are presumably catalysed by one or more of six distinct AAA ATPases located in the base-a ring-like 19S subdomain that abuts the axial pore of the 20S complex and exhibits chaperone activity in vitro. Despite the importance of polyubiquitin chain recognition in proteasome function, the site of this signal's interaction with the 19S complex has not been identified previously. Here we use crosslinking to a reactive polyubiquitin chain to show that a specific ATPase subunit, S6' (also known as Rpt5), contacts the bound chain. The interaction of this signal with 26S proteasomes is modulated by ATP hydrolysis. Our results suggest that productive recognition of the proteolytic signal, as well as proteasome assembly and substrate unfolding, are ATP-dependent events.
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PMID:A proteasomal ATPase subunit recognizes the polyubiquitin degradation signal. 1196 60

Ubiquitination is a post-translation modification whereby the C-terminal end of ubiquitin (Ub) is covalently attached to the amino group of a lysine in a target protein. Additional ubiquitin groups are added using Ub-Ub linkages to form a polyubiquitin chain. A 26S protease complex specifically binds polyubiquitinated proteins and degrades them in an ATP-dependent manner. The target lysine in the substrate protein resides in a domain that is recognized by the ubiquitination machinery in a temporally and spatially controlled manner. The accessibility and the molecular dynamics of the target domain for each protein substrate is expected to be distinctive and this article is intended to facilitate investigations in this uncharted research area of ubiquitination mediated protein turnover by means of site-directed spin labeling. Examples illustrate the methodology of electron paramagnetic resonance data acquisition and interpretation in terms of secondary and tertiary structure resolution of proteins and protein complexes. Analysis of the spin labeled side chain mobility, its solvent accessibility, the polarity of the spin label micro-environment and distances between spin labels allow to model protein domains or protein-protein interaction sites and their conformational changes with a spatial resolution at the level of the backbone fold. The structural changes accompanying protein function or protein-protein interaction can be monitored in the millisecond time range. These features make site-directed spin labeling an attractive approach for the study of protein--ubiquitin interaction and protein ubiquitination.
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PMID:Methods for study of protein dynamics and protein-protein interaction in protein-ubiquitination by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. 1216 39

Ubiquitin-like proteins (ub-lps) are conjugated by a conserved enzymatic pathway, involving ATP-dependent activation at the C terminus by an activating enzyme (E1) and formation of a thiolester intermediate with a conjugating enzyme (E2) prior to ligation to the target. Ubc9, the E2 for SUMO, synthesizes polymeric chains in the presence of its E1 and MgATP. To better understand conjugation of ub-lps, we have performed mutational analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Ubc9p, which conjugates the SUMO family member Smt3p. We have identified Ubc9p surfaces involved in thiolester bond and Smt3p-Smt3p chain formation. The residues involved in thiolester bond formation map to a surface we show is the E1 binding site, and E2s for other ub-lps are likely to bind to their E1s at a homologous site. We also find that this same surface binds Smt3p. A mutation that impairs binding to E1 but not Smt3p impairs thiolester bond formation, suggesting that it is the E1 interaction at this site that is crucial. Interestingly, other E2s and their relatives also use this same surface for binding to ubiquitin, E3s, and other proteins, revealing this to be a multipurpose binding site and suggesting that the entire E1-E2-E3 pathway has coevolved for a given ub-lp.
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PMID:Identification of a multifunctional binding site on Ubc9p required for Smt3p conjugation. 1235 63

ISG15 is a ubiquitin-like protein that is induced by interferon and microbial challenge. Ubiquitin-like proteins are covalently conjugated to cellular proteins and may intersect the ubiquitin-proteasome system via common substrates or reciprocal regulation. To investigate the relationship between ISG15 conjugation and proteasome function, we treated interferon-induced cells with proteasome inhibitors. Surprisingly, inhibition of proteasomal, but not lysosomal, proteases dramatically enhanced the level of ISG15 conjugates. The stimulation of ISG15 conjugates occurred rapidly in the absence of protein synthesis and was most dramatic in the cytoskeletal protein fraction. Inhibition of ISG15 conjugation by ATP depletion abrogated the proteasome inhibitor-dependent increase in ISG15 conjugates, suggesting that the effect was mediated by de novo conjugation, rather than protection from proteasomal degradation or inhibition of ISG15 deconjugating activity. The increase in ISG15 conjugates did not occur through a stabilization of the ISG15 E1 enzyme, UBE1L. Furthermore, simultaneous modification of proteins by both ISG15 and ubiquitin did not account for the proteasome inhibitor-dependent increase in ISG15 conjugates. These findings provide the first evidence for a link between ISG15 conjugation and proteasome function and support a model in which proteins destined for ISG15 conjugation are proteasome-regulated.
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PMID:Proteasomes modulate conjugation to the ubiquitin-like protein, ISG15. 1242 15

Plant viruses move to adjacent cells with the use of virus-encoded cell-to-cell movement proteins. Using proteins produced by in vitro translation, we present evidence that the '69K' movement protein of Turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV) is recognized as a substrate for the attachment of polyubiquitin chains and for subsequent rapid and selective proteolysis by the proteasome, the ATP-dependent proteolytic system present in reticulocyte lysate. Truncation of the 69K protein suggests the existence of two degradation signals within its sequence. We propose that selective degradation of virus movement proteins may contribute to the previously reported transient nature of their accumulation during infection.
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PMID:Stability in vitro of the 69K movement protein of Turnip yellow mosaic virus is regulated by the ubiquitin-mediated proteasome pathway. 1246 97


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