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RNAi in the regulation of mammalian viral infections
Authors:Kuan-Teh Jeang
Institution:1. Tumour Immunology Unit, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, 10N5 Commonwealth Building, Du Cane Road, London, W12 0NN, UK
2. Department of Biophysics and Biochemistry, Graduate School of Medicine and Cell Biology and Metabolism Group, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, 2-2 Yamada-oka, Suita, Osaka, 565-0871, Japan
3. Institute of Biochemistry II, Medical Faculty of the Goethe University, University Hospital Building 75, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60528, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Abstract:Ubiquitination now ranks with phosphorylation as one of the best-studied post-translational modifications of proteins with broad regulatory roles across all of biology. Ubiquitination usually involves the addition of ubiquitin chains to target protein molecules, and these may be of eight different types, seven of which involve the linkage of one of the seven internal lysine (K) residues in one ubiquitin molecule to the carboxy-terminal diglycine of the next. In the eighth, the so-called linear ubiquitin chains, the linkage is between the amino-terminal amino group of methionine on a ubiquitin that is conjugated with a target protein and the carboxy-terminal carboxy group of the incoming ubiquitin. Physiological roles are well established for K48-linked chains, which are essential for signaling proteasomal degradation of proteins, and for K63-linked chains, which play a part in recruitment of DNA repair enzymes, cell signaling and endocytosis. We focus here on linear ubiquitin chains, how they are assembled, and how three different avenues of research have indicated physiological roles for linear ubiquitination in innate and adaptive immunity and suppression of inflammation.
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