Literature DB >> 1647208

Ubiquitin in health and disease.

R J Mayer1, J Arnold, L László, M Landon, J Lowe.   

Abstract

Studies in recent years have shown that ubiquitin has increasingly important functions in eukaryotic cells; roles which were previously not suspected in healthy and diseased cells. The interplay between molecular pathological and molecular cell biological findings has indicated that ubiquitin may be pivotal in the cell stress response in chronic degenerative and viral diseases. Furthermore, the studies have led to the notion that ubiquitination may not only serve as a signal for nonlysosomal protein degradation but may be a unifying covalent protein modification for the major intracellular protein catabolic systems; these can act to identify proteins for cytosolic proteinases or direct intact and fragmented proteins into the lysosome system for breakdown to amino acids. This unifying role could explain why ubiquitin is restricted to eukaryotic cells, which possess extensive endomembrane systems in addition to a nuclear envelope. Protein ubiquitination is a feature of most filamentous inclusions and certain other intracellular conglomerates that are found in some degenerative and viral diseases. The detection of ubiquitin-protein conjugates is not of great diagnostic importance in these diseases. Protein ubiquitination is not only essential for the normal physiological turnover of proteins but appears to have been adapted as part of an intracellular surveillance system that can be activated by altered, damaged, or foreign proteins and organelles. The purpose of this system is to isolate and eliminate these noxious structures from the cell: as a cytoprotective mechanism this appears to have evolved in the cell akin perhaps to an 'intracellular immune system'. Other heat shock proteins such as hsp 70 may be involved in this process. It is apparent that ubiquitin has a role in embryonic development. Protein ubiquitination is presumably involved in the reorganisation of cytoplasm that accompanies cell differentiation. Ubiquitin is also necessary for the gross intracellular degradative processes which are consequent upon programmed cell death. Cell elimination is of key importance for a number of developmental morphogenetic changes. An understanding of the molecular details of these processes will no doubt provide further insights into the wide ranging roles of ubiquitin in the life process. As it says in the book 'Ubiquitin'; there is no doubt that ubiquitin is a 'lucky' protein. It is lucky in many ways: lucky for scientific progress, lucky for biomedical scientists and lucky for life! If you have not already done so, why don't you get lucky and look for a role for ubiquitin in your experimental system. As Avram Hershko has said "there is plenty to go round"!

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1647208     DOI: 10.1016/0167-4781(91)90002-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  19 in total

Review 1.  [Ubiquitin-dependent degradation and modification of proteins].

Authors:  J von Kampen; M Wettern
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  1992-04

Review 2.  Heat shock proteins. Introduction.

Authors:  U Feige; J Mollenhauer
Journal:  Experientia       Date:  1992-07-15

Review 3.  Aging and regulated protein degradation: who has the UPPer hand?

Authors:  Vita A Vernace; Thomas Schmidt-Glenewinkel; Maria E Figueiredo-Pereira
Journal:  Aging Cell       Date:  2007-08-06       Impact factor: 9.304

Review 4.  Ubiquitin/proteasome pathway impairment in neurodegeneration: therapeutic implications.

Authors:  Qian Huang; Maria E Figueiredo-Pereira
Journal:  Apoptosis       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 4.677

5.  Provirus integration into a gene encoding a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme results in a placental defect and embryonic lethality.

Authors:  K Harbers; U Müller; A Grams; E Li; R Jaenisch; T Franz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1996-10-29       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 6.  Autophagic proteolysis: control and specificity.

Authors:  E F Blommaart; J J Luiken; A J Meijer
Journal:  Histochem J       Date:  1997-05

7.  Ubiquitin pathway involvement in human lymphocyte gamma-irradiation-induced apoptosis.

Authors:  J Delic; M Morange; H Magdelenat
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1993-08       Impact factor: 4.272

8.  Chronic cardiac rejection: identification of five upregulated genes in transplanted hearts by differential mRNA display.

Authors:  U Utans; P Liang; L R Wyner; M J Karnovsky; M E Russell
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1994-07-05       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 9.  Oxygen free radicals as inducers of heat shock protein synthesis in cultured human neuroblastoma cells: relevance to neurodegenerative disease.

Authors:  R Omar; M Pappolla
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  1993       Impact factor: 5.270

Review 10.  Cytokine therapeutics: lessons from interferon alpha.

Authors:  J U Gutterman
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1994-02-15       Impact factor: 11.205

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