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Query: UNIPROT:P62988 (
Ubiquitin
)
4,326
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although there is a binding site on the proteasome for the
polyubiquitin
chains attached to degradation substrates by the ubiquitination machinery, it is currently unclear whether in vivo the activities of the ubiquitination machinery and the proteasome are coupled. Here we show that two human homologs of the yeast ubiquitin-like Dsk2 protein, hPLIC-1 and hPLIC-2, physically associate with both proteasomes and ubiquitin ligases in large complexes. Overexpression of hPLIC proteins interferes with the in vivo degradation of two unrelated ubiquitin-dependent proteasome substrates, p53 and IkappaBalpha, but not a ubiquitin-independent substrate. Our findings raise the possibility that the hPLIC proteins, and possibly related ubiquitin-like family members, may functionally link the ubiquitination machinery to the proteasome to affect in vivo protein degradation.
Mol
Cell 2000 Aug
PMID:The hPLIC proteins may provide a link between the ubiquitination machinery and the proteasome. 1098 87
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).
Mol
Reprod Dev 2000 Oct
PMID:The 26S proteasome: ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis in the tunnel. 1098 10
Ubiquitin
-proteasome-mediated destruction of rate-limiting proteins is required for timely progression through the main cell cycle transitions. The anaphase-promoting complex (APC), periodically activated by the Cdh1 subunit, represents one of the major cellular ubiquitin ligases which, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Drosophila spp., triggers exit from mitosis and during G(1) prevents unscheduled DNA replication. In this study we investigated the importance of periodic oscillation of the APC-Cdh1 activity for the cell cycle progression in human cells. We show that conditional interference with the APC-Cdh1 dissociation at the G(1)/S transition resulted in an inability to accumulate a surprisingly broad range of critical mitotic regulators including cyclin B1, cyclin A, Plk1, Pds1, mitosin (CENP-F), Aim1, and Cdc20. Unexpectedly, although constitutively assembled APC-Cdh1 also delayed G(1)/S transition and lowered the rate of DNA synthesis during S phase, some of the activities essential for DNA replication became markedly amplified, mainly due to a progressive increase of E2F-dependent cyclin E transcription and a rapid turnover of the p27(Kip1) cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor. Consequently, failure to inactivate APC-Cdh1 beyond the G(1)/S transition not only inhibited productive cell division but also supported slow but uninterrupted DNA replication, precluding S-phase exit and causing massive overreplication of the genome. Our data suggest that timely oscillation of the APC-Cdh1 ubiquitin ligase activity represents an essential step in coordinating DNA replication with cell division and that failure of mechanisms regulating association of APC with the Cdh1 activating subunit can undermine genomic stability in mammalian cells.
Mol
Cell Biol 2000 Oct
PMID:Nonperiodic activity of the human anaphase-promoting complex-Cdh1 ubiquitin ligase results in continuous DNA synthesis uncoupled from mitosis. 1100 57
Ubiquitin
-mediated degradation plays a crucial role in many fundamental biological pathways, including the mediation of cellular responses to changes in environmental conditions. A family of ubiquitin ligase complexes, called SCF complexes, found throughout eukaryotes, is involved in a variety of biological pathways. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, an SCF complex contains a common set of components, namely, Cdc53p, Skp1p, and Hrt1p. Substrate specificity is defined by a variable component called an F-box protein. The F- box is a approximately 40-amino-acid motif that allows the F-box protein to bind Skp1p. Each SCF complex recognizes different substrates according to which F-box protein is associated with the complex. In yeasts, three SCF complexes have been demonstrated to associate with the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Cdc34p and have ubiquitin ligase activity. F-box proteins are not abundant and are unstable. As part of the SCF(Met30p) complex, the F-box protein Met30p represses methionine biosynthetic gene expression when availability of L-methionine is high. Here we demonstrate that in vivo SCF(Met30p) complex activity can be regulated by the abundance of Met30p. Furthermore, we provide evidence that Met30p abundance is regulated by the availability of L-methionine. We propose that the cellular responses mediated by an SCF complex are directly regulated by environmental conditions through the control of F-box protein stability.
Mol
Cell Biol 2000 Nov
PMID:The abundance of Met30p limits SCF(Met30p) complex activity and is regulated by methionine availability. 1102 56
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.
Mol
Biol Cell 2000 Oct
PMID:Proteasomal proteomics: identification of nucleotide-sensitive proteasome-interacting proteins by mass spectrometric analysis of affinity-purified proteasomes. 1102 46
Selective protein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteosome pathway has recently emerged as a powerful regulatory mechanism in a wide variety of cellular processes.
Ubiquitin
conjugation requires the sequential activity of three enzymes or protein complexes called the ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1), the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2), and the ubiquitin-protein ligase (E3). In most eukaryotes, there are a small number of similar E1 isoforms without apparent functional specificity. The specific selection of target proteins is accomplished by the E2 and E3 proteins. One of the best-characterized families of E3s are the SCF complexes. The SCF is composed of a cullin (Cdc53), SKP1, RBX1 and one member of a large family of proteins called F-box proteins. The function of the F-box protein is to interact with target proteins. In some cases, the stability of the F-box protein may regulate activity of the SCF complex. In addition, post-translational modification of the cullin subunit by the ubiquitin-like protein RUB/NEDD8 appears to regulate SCF function. In plants, the SCF has so far been implicated in floral development, circadian clock, and response to the plant growth regulators auxin and jasmonic acid.
Plant
Mol
Biol 2000 Sep
PMID:F-box proteins and protein degradation: an emerging theme in cellular regulation. 1111 56
Ubiquitin
-mediated proteolysis regulates the activity of diverse receptor systems. Here, we identify Smurf2, a C2-WW-HECT domain ubiquitin ligase and show that Smurf2 associates constitutively with Smad7. Smurf2 is nuclear, but binding to Smad7 induces export and recruitment to the activated TGF beta receptor, where it causes degradation of receptors and Smad7 via proteasomal and lysosomal pathways. IFN gamma, which stimulates expression of Smad7, induces Smad7-Smurf2 complex formation and increases TGF beta receptor turnover, which is stabilized by blocking Smad7 or Smurf2 expression. Furthermore, Smad7 mutants that interfere with recruitment of Smurf2 to the receptors are compromised in their inhibitory activity. These studies thus define Smad7 as an adaptor in an E3 ubiquitin-ligase complex that targets the TGF beta receptor for degradation.
Mol
Cell 2000 Dec
PMID:Smad7 binds to Smurf2 to form an E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets the TGF beta receptor for degradation. 1116 10
Germ-line transformation was achieved in the Caribbean fruit fly, Anastrepha suspensa, using a piggyBac vector marked with an enhanced green fluorescent protein gene regulated by the Drosophila melanogaster
polyubiquitin
promoter. Four transgenic G(0) lines were selected exhibiting unambiguous GFP expression. Southern hybridization indicated the presence of one to four integrations in each of the transgenic lines with two integrations verified as piggyBac-mediated by sequencing their insertion sites. Fluorescence was detectable throughout development, and in adults was most intense from the thoracic flight muscle. Although adult cuticle quenched fluorescence, GFP was routinely detectable in the thorax. A quantitative spectrofluorometric assay was developed for GFP fluorescence that indicated differing levels of fluorescence among the transgenic lines, suggesting some level of position effect variegation/suppression. These results are encouraging for the use of this marker system in insect species not amenable to mutation-based visible markers. Together with the piggyBac vector, a transformation system is presented that has the potential to be universally applicable in insect species.
Insect Biochem
Mol
Biol 2001 Feb
PMID:Transformation of the Caribbean fruit fly, Anastrepha suspensa, with a piggyBac vector marked with polyubiquitin-regulated GFP. 1116 42
Polyubiquitin chains, in which the C-terminus and a lysine side chain of successive ubiquitin molecules are linked by an isopeptide bond, function to target substrate proteins for degradation by the 26S proteasome. Chains of at least four ubiquitin moieties appear to be required for efficient recognition by the 26S proteasome, although the conformations of the
polyubiquitin
chains recognized by the proteasome or by other enzymes involved in ubiquitin metabolism are currently unknown. A new crystal form of tetraubiquitin, which has two possible chain connectivities that are indistinguishable in the crystal, is reported. In one possible connectivity, the tetraubiquitin chain is extended and packs closely against the antiparallel neighbor chain in the crystal to conceal a hydrophobic surface implicated in 26S proteasome recognition. In the second possibility, the tetraubiqutitin forms a closed compact structure, in which that same hydrophobic surface is buried. Both of these conformations are quite unlike the structure of tetraubiquitin that was previously determined in a different crystal form [Cook et al. (1994), J.
Mol
. Biol. 236, 601--609]. The new structure suggests that
polyubiquitin
chains may possess a substantially greater degree of conformational flexibility than has previously been appreciated.
...
PMID:Structure of a new crystal form of tetraubiquitin. 1117 99
Ubiquitin
-specific processing proteases (UBPs) are characterized by a conserved core domain with surrounding divergent sequences, particularly at the N-terminal end. We previously cloned two isoforms of a testis UBP, UBP-t1 and UBP-t2, which contain identical core regions but distinct N termini that target the two isoforms to different subcellular locations (Lin, H., Keriel, A., Morales, C. R., Bedard, N., Zhao, Q., Hingamp, P., Lefrancois, S., Combaret, L., and Wing, S. S. (2000)
Mol
. Cell. Biol. 20, 6568-6578). To determine whether the N termini also influence the biochemical functions of the UBP, we expressed UBP-t1, UBP-t2, and the common core domain, UBP core, in Escherichia coli. The three isoforms cleaved branched triubiquitin at >20-fold faster rates than linear diubiquitin, suggesting that UBP-testis functions as an isopeptidase. Both N-terminal extensions inhibited the ability of UBP-core to generate free ubiquitin when linked in a peptide bond with itself, another peptide, or to small adducts. The N-terminal extension of UBP-t2 increased the ability of UBP-core to cleave branched triubiquitin. UBP-core removed ubiquitin from testis ubiquitinated proteins more rapidly than UBP-t2 and UBP-t1. Thus, UBP enzymes appear to contain a catalytic core domain, the activities and specificities of which can be modulated by N-terminal extensions. These divergent N termini can alter localization and confer multiple functions to the various members of the large UBP family.
...
PMID:Divergent N-terminal sequences of a deubiquitinating enzyme modulate substrate specificity. 1127 32
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