Litcius/Paper detail

UPS-dependent strategies of protein quality control degradation

Leonie Müller, Thorsten Hoppe

2024Trends in Biochemical Sciences35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The degradation of damaged proteins is critical for tissue integrity and organismal health because damaged proteins have a high propensity to form aggregates. E3 ubiquitin ligases are key regulators of protein quality control (PQC) and mediate the selective degradation of damaged proteins, a process termed 'PQC degradation' (PQCD). The degradation signals (degrons) that trigger PQCD are based on hydrophobic sites that are normally buried within the native protein structure. However, an open question is how PQCD-specialized E3 ligases distinguish between transiently misfolded proteins, which can be efficiently refolded, and permanently damaged proteins, which must be degraded. While significant progress has been made in characterizing degradation determinants, understanding the key regulatory signals of cellular and organismal PQCD pathways remains a challenge.

Topics & Concepts

Degradation (telecommunications)Control (management)Protein qualityChemistryQuality (philosophy)Computational biologyCell biologyBiochemistryComputer scienceBiologyArtificial intelligencePhysicsTelecommunicationsQuantum mechanicsMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and BioproductionFungal and yeast genetics researchAdvanced Proteomics Techniques and Applications