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The Yeast Ubiquitin Protease, Ubp3p, Promotes Protein Stability
Author(s) -
Christine Taylor Brew,
Tim C. Huffaker
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/162.3.1079
Subject(s) - biology , deubiquitinating enzyme , ubiquitin , mutation , yeast , gene , proteases , protease , genetics , saccharomyces cerevisiae , microbiology and biotechnology , allele , enzyme , biochemistry
Stu1p is a microtubule-associated protein required for spindle assembly. In this article we show that the temperature-sensitive stu1-5 allele is synthetically lethal in combination with ubp3, gim1-gim5, and kem1 mutations. The primary focus of this article is on the stu1-5 ubp3 interaction. Ubp3 is a deubiquitination enzyme and a member of a large family of cysteine proteases that cleave ubiquitin moieties from protein substrates. UBP3 is the only one of 16 UBP genes in yeast whose loss is synthetically lethal with stu1-5. Stu1p levels in stu1-5 cells are several-fold lower than the levels in wild-type cells and the stu1-5 temperature sensitivity can be rescued by additional copies of stu1-5. These results indicate that the primary effect of the stu1-5 mutation is to make the protein less stable. The levels of Stu1p are even lower in ubp3Δ stu1-5 cells, suggesting that Ubp3p plays a role in promoting protein stability. We also found that ubp3Δ produces growth defects in combination with mutations in other genes that decrease protein stability. Overall, these data support the idea that Ubp3p has a general role in the reversal of protein ubiquitination.

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