Literature DB >> 20661538

Protein ubiquitylation in pancreatic cancer.

Thomas Bonacci1, Julie Roignot, Philippe Soubeyran.   

Abstract

Pancreatic cancer is one of the worst, as almost 100% of patients will die within 5 years after diagnosis. The tumors are characterized by an early, invasive, and metastatic phenotype, and extreme resistance to all known anticancer therapies. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop new investigative strategies in order to identify new molecular targets and, possibly, new drugs to fight this disease efficiently. Whereas it has been known for more than 3 decades now, ubiquitylation is a post-translational modification of protein that only recently emerged as a major regulator of many biological functions, dependent and independent on the proteasome, whose failure is involved in many human diseases, including cancer. Indeed, despite its role in promoting protein degradation through the proteasome, ubiquitylation is now known to regulate diverse cellular processes, such as membrane protein endocytosis and intracellular trafficking, assembly of protein complexes, gene transcription, and activation or inactivation of enzymes. Taking into account that ubiquitylation machinery is a three-step process involving hundreds of proteins, which is countered by numerous ubiquitin hydrolases, and that the function of ubiquitylation relies on the recognition of the ubiquitin signals by hundreds of proteins containing a ubiquitin binding domain (including the proteasome), the number of possible therapeutic targets is exceptionally vast and will need to be explored carefully for each disease. In the case of pancreatic cancer, the study and the identification of specific alteration(s) in protein ubiquitylation may help to explain its severity and may furnish more specific targets for more efficient therapies.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20661538      PMCID: PMC5763818          DOI: 10.1100/tsw.2010.133

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal        ISSN: 1537-744X


  2 in total

Review 1.  Ubiquitination involved enzymes and cancer.

Authors:  Mei-juan Zhou; Fang-zhi Chen; Han-chun Chen
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  2014-07-15       Impact factor: 3.064

Review 2.  Impact of posttranslational modifications in pancreatic carcinogenesis and treatments.

Authors:  Nianhong Chen; Qiaoqiao Zheng; Guoqing Wan; Feng Guo; Xiaobin Zeng; Ping Shi
Journal:  Cancer Metastasis Rev       Date:  2021-08-03       Impact factor: 9.264

  2 in total

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