Litcius/Paper detail

Valosin-Containing Protein (VCP): A Review of Its Diverse Molecular Functions and Clinical Phenotypes

Carly Sabine Pontifex, Mashiat Zaman, Roberto D. Fanganiello, Timothy E. Shutt, Gerald Pfeffer

2024International Journal of Molecular Sciences26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this review we examine the functionally diverse ATPase associated with various cellular activities (AAA-ATPase), valosin-containing protein (VCP/p97), its molecular functions, the mutational landscape of VCP and the phenotypic manifestation of VCP disease. VCP is crucial to a multitude of cellular functions including protein quality control, endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD), autophagy, mitophagy, lysophagy, stress granule formation and clearance, DNA replication and mitosis, DNA damage response including nucleotide excision repair, ATM- and ATR-mediated damage response, homologous repair and non-homologous end joining. VCP variants cause multisystem proteinopathy, and pathology can arise in several tissue types such as skeletal muscle, bone, brain, motor neurons, sensory neurons and possibly cardiac muscle, with the disease course being challenging to predict.

Topics & Concepts

AAA proteinsBiologyCell biologyEndoplasmic-reticulum-associated protein degradationEndoplasmic reticulumPhenotypeDNA repairDNA damageProteostasisUnfolded protein responseATPaseGeneticsDNABiochemistryGeneEnzymeAutophagy in Disease and TherapyEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseLysosomal Storage Disorders Research