scispace - formally typeset
N

Noa Reis

Researcher at Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

Publications -  17
Citations -  1212

Noa Reis is an academic researcher from Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteasome & Ubiquitin. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 16 publications receiving 1072 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Subunit interaction maps for the regulatory particle of the 26S proteasome and the COP9 signalosome

TL;DR: Comprehensive subunit interaction maps for the 26S proteasome and CSN support the ancestral relationship of these two complexes.
Journal ArticleDOI

MPN+, a putative catalytic motif found in a subset of MPN domain proteins from eukaryotes and prokaryotes, is critical for Rpn11 function

TL;DR: The putative catalytic nature of the MPN+ motif makes it a good candidate for a pivotal enzymatic function, possibly a proteasome-associated deubiquitinating activity and a CSN-associated Nedd8/Rub1-removing activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reversible 26S Proteasome Disassembly upon Mitochondrial Stress

TL;DR: It is shown that acute oxidative stress caused by environmental insults or mitochondrial defects results in rapid disassembly of 26S proteasomes into intact 20S core and 19S regulatory particles, and polyubiquitinated substrates accumulate, mitochondrial networks fragment, and cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels increase.
Journal ArticleDOI

A perturbed ubiquitin landscape distinguishes between ubiquitin in trafficking and in proteolysis

TL;DR: It is concluded that despite the shared use of the ubiquitin molecule, the two branches of the Ubiquitin machinery—the ubiquit in-proteasome system and the ubiqu itin trafficking system—were unevenly perturbed by expression of K0 Ub.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extraproteasomal Rpn10 Restricts Access of the Polyubiquitin-Binding Protein Dsk2 to Proteasome

TL;DR: By restricting Dsk2 access to the proteasome, extraproteasomal Rpn10 was essential for alleviating the cellular stress associated with DSk2, highlighting the importance of polyubiquitin shuttles such as RPN10 and Dsk1 in controlling the ubiquitin landscape.