| Literature DB >> 18047740 |
Abstract
A functional ubiquitin proteasome system is essential for all eukaryotic cells and therefore any alteration to its components has potential pathological consequences. Though the exact underlying mechanism is unclear, an age-related decrease in proteasome activity weakens cellular capacity to remove oxidatively modified proteins and favours the development of neurodegenerative and cardiac diseases. Up-regulation of proteasome activity is characteristic of muscle wasting conditions including sepsis, cachexia and uraemia, but may not be rate limiting. Meanwhile, enhanced presence of immunoproteasomes in aging brain and muscle tissue could reflect a persistent inflammatory defence and anti-stress mechanism, whereas in cancer cells, their down-regulation reflects a means by which to escape immune surveillance. Hence, induction of apoptosis by synthetic proteasome inhibitors is a potential treatment strategy for cancer, whereas for other diseases such as neurodegeneration, the use of proteasome-activating or -modulating compounds could be more effective. Publication history: Republished from Current BioData's Targeted Proteins database (TPdb; http://www.targetedproteinsdb.com).Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18047740 PMCID: PMC2106367 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2091-8-S1-S3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biochem ISSN: 1471-2091 Impact factor: 4.059
Adverse effects of the environment and aging on the proteasome system. The table summarizes diseases where proteasomes are known to be implicated and the impact that aging and environmental effectors could have on their development.
| - transient ischemia/reperfusion | decreased activity | 26S proteasomes | apoptosis | 89, 90 |
| - pressure overload | decreased activity | 26S proteasomes | apoptosis | 68 |
| - inclusion body myositis | decreased activity | 26S proteasomes, induction of immunoproteasome | inclusion bodies | 83 |
| decreased activity | 20S proteasomes | aggregation of (oxidized) proteins | 66 | |
| - Alzheimer's | decreased activity | 20S/26S proteasomes | β-amyloid plaques/tau tangles, neuronal loss | 77 |
| - Parkinson's | decreased activity | 20S/26S proteasomes | Lewy bodies, neuronal loss | 73 |
| - amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | decreased activity | 20S/26S proteasomes | SOD1 aggregates, motor neuron loss | 75 |
| - Huntington's | decreased activity | 20S/26S proteasomes, induction of immunoproteasome | poly-glutamine inclusions, neuronal dysfunction/loss | 76 |
| - HIV/adenovirus | decreased expression, inhibition | immunoproteasomes, 20S proteasomes | impaired immune response | 156 |
| - hepatitis B | inhibition | 20S/26S proteasomes | hepatitis | 183 |
| - HTLV | activation | nuclear proteasomes | neurological inflammation | 184 |
| - Sjogren's syndrome | decreased expression | subunit β1i | tissue destruction | 185 |
| - multiple myeloma | increased activity, depressed expression | 20S/26S proteasomes, immunoproteasomes | suppression of apoptosis, induction of proliferaton | 122 |
| - sepsis | increased activity | 20S/26S proteasomes | Inflammation, muscle protein wasting | 100 |
| - metabolic acidosis | increased activity | 20S/26S proteasomes | Inflammation, muscle protein wasting | 97 |