Logotipo ImpactU
Autor

Lysine 63 Polyubiquitination in Immunotherapy and in Cancer-promoting Inflammation

Acceso Abierto
ID Minciencias: ART-0000268160-11
Ranking: ART-ART_A1

Abstract:

Covalent and reversible post-translational modifications of proteins are a common theme in signaling. Ubiquitin conjugation was originally described to target proteins to proteasomal degradation by ubiquitin polymerization involving lysine (K) 48 residues. Differently linked polymers of polyubiquitin have been found that modify proteins without targeting to proteasomal degradation. Instead this pathway creates docking sites for signaling scaffolds that are key to control the nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) pathway. Indeed TRAF-2, TRAF-6, and TRAF-3 are E3 ubiquitin ligases that form K63-linked ubiquitin polymers. Therefore signaling via TNF family receptors, IL1R, IL-18R, T-cell receptor (TCR), and Toll-like receptors (TLR) use this type of post-translational modification. Specific enzymes exist (DUBs) that deactivate this system, degrading K63 polyubiquitin chains. Interestingly, mice deficient in these deubiquitinases develop autoimmunity and inflammation. In carcinogenesis, the K63 polyubiquitin pathway is possibly critical for inflammation-driven tumor promotion. The pathway is also critically involved in costimulation of tumor immunity/immunotherapy as well as in the biology of malignant cells themselves. The elements of this new signaling paradigm offer the opportunity for therapeutic exploitation and drug discovery.

Tópico:

Ubiquitin and proteasome pathways

Citaciones:

Citations: 45
45

Citaciones por año:

Altmétricas:

Paperbuzz Score: 0
0

Información de la Fuente:

SCImago Journal & Country Rank
FuenteClinical Cancer Research
Cuartil año de publicaciónNo disponible
Volumen15
Issue22
Páginas6751 - 6757
pISSNNo disponible
ISSN1557-3265

Enlaces e Identificadores:

Artículo de revista