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Regulation of Protein Degradation by Proteasomes in Cancer

Authors
Jang, Ho Hee
Issue Date
Dec-2018
Publisher
KOREAN SOC CANCER PREVENTION
Keywords
Proteasome; Ubiquitination; Oxidative stress; Protein degradation; Cancer
Citation
JOURNAL OF CANCER PREVENTION, v.23, no.4, pp.153 - 161
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CANCER PREVENTION
Volume
23
Number
4
Start Page
153
End Page
161
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/3057
DOI
10.15430/JCP.2018.23.4.153
ISSN
2288-3649
Abstract
Imbalance of protein homeostasis (proteostasis) is known to cause cellular malfunction, cell death, and diseases. Elaborate regulation of protein synthesis and degradation is one of the important processes in maintaining normal cellular functions. Protein degradation pathways in eukaryotes are largely divided into proteasome-mediated degradation and lysosome-mediated degradation. Proteasome is a multisubunit complex that selectively degrades 80% to 90% of cellular proteins. Proteasome-mediated degradation can be divided into 26S proteasome (20S proteasome + 19S regulatory particle) and free 20S proteasome degradation. In 1980, it was discovered that during ubiquitination process, wherein ubiquitin binds to a substrate protein in an ATP-dependent manner, ubiquitin acts as a degrading signal to degrade the substrate protein via proteasome. Conversely, 20S proteasome degrades the substrate protein without using ATP or ubiquitin because it recognizes the oxidized and structurally modified hydrophobic patch of the substrate protein. To date, most studies have focused on protein degradation via 26S proteasome. This review describes the 26S/20S proteasomal pathway of protein degradation and discusses the potential of proteasome as therapeutic targets for cancer treatment as well as against diseases caused by abnormalities in the proteolytic system.
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