JoVE Logo

Anmelden

9.10 : Regulierter Proteinabbau

It is vital to regulate the activity of enzymatic as well as non-enzymatic proteins inside the cell. This can be achieved either through creating a balance between their rate of synthesis and degradation or regulating the intrinsic activity of the protein. Both these regulation mechanisms play an essential role in the normal functioning of cells.

Protein degradation plays two important roles in the cells. It helps to protect cells from misfolded or damaged proteins before they lead to a diseased state. It also aids in controlling the levels of otherwise healthy proteins, which only have a short-lived function inside the cell under certain conditions.

One of the major protein degradation pathways active in eukaryotic cells is the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. However, even this pathway is tightly regulated to only allow degradation of specific target proteins under certain conditions. Two of the most common regulatory mechanisms are the tight control of E3 ubiquitin ligase activity, and the unmasking degradation signals in the target proteins.

Humans have an estimated 600 or more E3 ubiquitin ligase genes, each of which can mediate their own target proteins' ubiquitination. However, E3 ligase activity is regulated via different mechanisms of action such as phosphorylation, or ligand binding. Similarly, the unmasking of degradation signals in the intracellular proteins is controlled by several different mechanisms such as phosphorylation, peptide bond cleavage, or protein subunit dissociation. Only when the E3 ligases recognize these normally hidden degradation signals can the target proteinbe ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome.

Tags

Regulated Protein DegradationIntracellular ProteinsUbiquitin proteasome SystemMisfolded ProteinsCellular ProteinsProteasomal DegradationE3 LigasesUbiquitin LigaseTarget ProteinPhosphorylationAllosteric TransitionProtein Subunit AdditionUbiquitinationProteasomeAPCAnaphase promoting ComplexCell Cycle Regulators

Aus Kapitel 9:

article

Now Playing

9.10 : Regulierter Proteinabbau

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

7.1K Ansichten

article

9.1 : Translation

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

46.7K Ansichten

article

9.2 : tRNA-Aktivierung

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

18.7K Ansichten

article

9.3 : Ribosomen

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

23.6K Ansichten

article

9.4 : Verbesserung der Translationsgenauigkeit

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

8.5K Ansichten

article

9.5 : Initiierung der Translation

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

29.9K Ansichten

article

9.6 : Termination der Translation

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

24.4K Ansichten

article

9.7 : Nonsense-mediated mRNA Decay

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

10.4K Ansichten

article

9.8 : Molekulare Chaperone und Proteinfaltung

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

17.6K Ansichten

article

9.9 : Das Proteasom

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

8.4K Ansichten

article

9.11 : Proteine: Von den Genen bis zur Degradierung

Translation: Von RNA zum Protein

11.9K Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten