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Published 2012 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Three decades of studies to understand the functions of the ubiquitin family

Abstract

Many intracellular proteins are metabolically unstable or can become unstable during their lifetime in a cell. The in vivo half-lives of specific proteins range from less than a minute to many days. Among the functions of intracellular proteolysis are the elimination of misfolded or otherwise abnormal proteins; maintenance of amino acid pools in cells affected by stresses such as starvation; and generation of protein fragments that act as hormones, antigens, or other effectors. One major function of proteolytic pathways is the selective destruction of proteins whose concentrations must vary with time and alterations in the state of a cell. Short in vivo half-lives of such proteins provide a way to generate their spatial gradients and to rapidly adjust their concentration or subunit composition through changes in the rate of their degradation. The regulated (and processive) degradation of intracellular proteins is carried out largely by the ubiquitin–proteasome system (Ub system), in conjunction with autophagy-lysosome pathways. Other contributors to intracellular proteolysis include cytosolic and nuclear proteases, such as caspases, calpains, and separases. They often function as "upstream" components of the Ub system, which destroys protein fragments that had been produced by these (nonprocessive) proteases. Ub, a 76-residue protein, mediates selective proteolysis through its enzymatic conjugation to proteins that contain primary degradation signals (degrons (1)), thereby marking such proteins for degradation by the 26S proteasome, an ATPdependent multisubunit protease. Ub conjugation involves the formation of a poly-Ub chain that is linked (in most cases) to the ε-amino group of an internal Lys residue in a substrate protein. Ub is a "secondary" degron, in that Ub is conjugated to proteins that contain primary degradation signals. Ub has nonproteolytic functions as well. The design of the Ub system is summarized in Fig. 1.

Additional Information

© 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. I thank R. Hoffman (University of California, San Diego, USA), C. Brower, A. Shemorry, and B. Wadas (California Institute of Technology, USA) for helpful comments on the manuscript. Studies in our laboratory are supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the March of Dimes Foundation.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
January 13, 2024