UBE2O remodels the proteome during terminal erythroid differentiation
Author(s) -
Anthony T. Nguyen,
Miguel A. Prado,
Paul J. Schmidt,
Anoop K. Sendamarai,
Joshua WilsonGrady,
Mingwei Min,
Dean R. Campagna,
Geng Tian,
Yuan Shi,
Verena Dederer,
Mona Kawan,
Nathalie Kuehnle,
João A. Paulo,
Yu Yao,
Mitchell J. Weiss,
Monica J. Justice,
Steven P. Gygi,
Mark D. Fleming,
Daniel Finley
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aan0218
Subject(s) - reticulocyte , cytosol , proteome , microbiology and biotechnology , complement (music) , terminal (telecommunication) , globin , chemistry , erythroblast , biology , biochemistry , gene , messenger rna , phenotype , computer science , enzyme , telecommunications , stem cell , complementation , haematopoiesis
Removing orphan proteins from the system The degradation of excess subunits of protein complexes is a major quality-control problem for the cell. How such “orphans” are recognized and tagged for degradation is poorly understood. Two papers identify a protein quality-control pathway that acts on some of the most abundant protein complexes in the human body: hemoglobin and ribosomes (see the Perspective by Hampton and Dargemont). Yanagitaniet al. show that the central player in this process is an unusual enzyme (UBE2O) that recognizes substrates and tags them for destruction. Other quality-contr ol pathways tend to use separate factors for target selection (often a chaperone), ubiquitin donation (an E2), and ubiquitin conjugati on (an E3). Encoding all three activities in a single factor whose function can be reconstituted in a purified system provides a tractable route to detailed mechanistic and structural dissection. Nguyenet al. show the importance of the UBE2O pathway in the differentiation of red blood cells.Science , this issue p.472 , p.eaan0218 ; see also p.450
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