Literature DB >> 24550490

Calpain-generated natural protein fragments as short-lived substrates of the N-end rule pathway.

Konstantin I Piatkov1, Jang-Hyun Oh, Yuan Liu, Alexander Varshavsky.   

Abstract

Calpains are Ca(2+)-dependent intracellular proteases. We show here that calpain-generated natural C-terminal fragments of proteins that include G protein-coupled receptors, transmembrane ion channels, transcriptional regulators, apoptosis controllers, kinases, and phosphatases (Phe-GluN2a, Lys-Ica512, Arg-Ankrd2, Tyr-Grm1, Arg-Atp2b2, Glu-Bak, Arg-Igfbp2, Glu-IκBα, and Arg-c-Fos), are short-lived substrates of the Arg/N-end rule pathway, which targets destabilizing N-terminal residues. We also found that the identity of a fragment's N-terminal residue can change during evolution, but the residue's destabilizing activity is virtually always retained, suggesting selection pressures that favor a short half-life of the calpain-generated fragment. It is also shown that a self-cleavage of a calpain can result in an N-end rule substrate. Thus, the autoprocessing of calpains can control them by making active calpains short-lived. These and related results indicate that the Arg/N-end rule pathway mediates the remodeling of oligomeric complexes by eliminating protein fragments that are produced in these complexes through cleavages by calpains or other nonprocessive proteases. We suggest that this capability of the Arg/N-end rule pathway underlies a multitude of its previously known but mechanistically unclear functions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  calpain substrates; proteolysis; ubiquitin

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24550490      PMCID: PMC3948289          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1401639111

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  55 in total

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4.  Analyzing N-terminal Arginylation through the Use of Peptide Arrays and Degradation Assays.

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Review 5.  Physiological functions and clinical implications of the N-end rule pathway.

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6.  Phosphorylation Impacts N-end Rule Degradation of the Proteolytically Activated Form of BMX Kinase.

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Review 8.  Pharmacological Modulation of the N-End Rule Pathway and Its Therapeutic Implications.

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9.  N-terminal arginylation generates a bimodal degron that modulates autophagic proteolysis.

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10.  The ATF3 Transcription Factor Is a Short-Lived Substrate of the Arg/N-Degron Pathway.

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