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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

UBE2O is a quality control factor for orphans of multiprotein complexes

Kota Yanagitani, +2 more
- 04 Aug 2017 - 
- Vol. 357, Iss: 6350, pp 472-475
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TLDR
UBE2O is a self-contained quality control factor that comprises substrate recognition and ubiquitin transfer activities within a single protein to efficiently target orphans of multiprotein complexes for degradation.
Abstract
Many nascent proteins are assembled into multiprotein complexes of defined stoichiometry. Imbalances in the synthesis of individual subunits result in orphans. How orphans are selectively eliminated to maintain protein homeostasis is poorly understood. Here, we found that the conserved ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme UBE2O directly recognized juxtaposed basic and hydrophobic patches on unassembled proteins to mediate ubiquitination without a separate ubiquitin ligase. In reticulocytes, where UBE2O is highly up-regulated, unassembled α-globin molecules that failed to assemble with β-globin were selectively ubiquitinated by UBE2O. In nonreticulocytes, ribosomal proteins that did not engage nuclear import factors were targets for UBE2O. Thus, UBE2O is a self-contained quality control factor that comprises substrate recognition and ubiquitin transfer activities within a single protein to efficiently target orphans of multiprotein complexes for degradation.

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Citations
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Stress- and ubiquitylation-dependent phase separation of the proteasome

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Heterogeneity and specialized functions of translation machinery: from genes to organisms

TL;DR: The evidence for selective mRNA translation by components of these macromolecular complexes as a means to dynamically control the translation of the proteome in time and space is summarized.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying Absolute Protein Synthesis Rates Reveals Principles Underlying Allocation of Cellular Resources

TL;DR: This work presents a genome-wide approach, based on ribosome profiling, for measuring absolute protein synthesis rates, and reveals how general principles, important both for understanding natural systems and for synthesizing new ones, emerge from quantitative analyses of protein synthesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Biology of Proteostasis in Aging and Disease

TL;DR: The composition, function, and organizational properties of the PN are reviewed in the context of individual cells and entire organisms and the mechanisms by which disruption of thePN, and related stress response pathways, contributes to the initiation and progression of disease are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

DISOPRED3: precise disordered region predictions with annotated protein-binding activity

TL;DR: This work describes DISOPRED3, which extends its predecessor with new modules to predict IDRs and protein-binding sites within them and shows that this predictor generates precise assignments of disordered protein binding regions and that it compares well with other publicly available tools.
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