| Literature DB >> 20573219 |
Abstract
Unlike most substances that cells manufacture, proteins are not produced and broken down by a common series of chemical reactions, but by completely different (independent and disconnected) mechanisms that possess no intrinsic means of making the rates of the two processes equal and attaining steady state concentrations. Balance between them is achieved extrinsically and is often imagined today to be the result of the actions of chemical feedback agents. But however instantiated, chemical feedback or any similar mechanism can only rectify induced imbalances in a system previously balanced by other means. Those "other means" necessarily involve reversible mass action or equilibrium-based interactions between native and altered forms of protein molecules somewhere in time and space between their synthesis and degradation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20573219 PMCID: PMC2909984 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4682-7-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Biol Med Model ISSN: 1742-4682 Impact factor: 2.432
Figure 1The feedback regulation of protein synthesis. Shown are events of protein synthesis that are affected either directly or indirectly by feedback agents (italics)(see The effect of feedback).
Figure 2The feedback regulation of protein degradation. Shown are events of proteasomal degradation (for an ubiquitination system) that are affected either directly or indirectly by feedback agents (italics)(see The effect of feedback).