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E.g., Wessler, regeneration, PubMed ID 17578919.

expand all sections collapse all sections  Reference "Cloning and characterization of a 20-kDa ubiquitin carrier protein from wheat that catalyzes multiubiquitin chain formation in vitro"
Reference ID 9213
Title Cloning and characterization of a 20-kDa ubiquitin carrier protein from wheat that catalyzes multiubiquitin chain formation in vitro
Source Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1991, vol. 88, pp. 10297-10301
Author (1) Vierstra-R-D
Abstract Recent evidence indicates that the commitment to degrade cellular proteins by
the ubiquitin proteolytic pathway is dependent on the covalent attachment of
multiubiquitin chains to the target protein [Chau, V., Tobias, J. W., Bachmair,
A., Marriott, D., Ecker, D. J., Gonda, D. K. & Varshavsky, A. (1989) Science
243, 1576-1583]. We have isolated a 20-kDa ubiquitin carrier protein [E2(20
kDa)] from wheat by using ubiquitin covalent affinity chromatography and anion-
exchange HPLC that catalyzes multiubiquitin chain formation in vitro. This
reaction is blocked by the addition of a mutant ubiquitin in which arginine has
been substituted for lysine at residue 48, demonstrating that the coupling of
ubiquitin to ubiquitin is likely to be through an isopeptide linkage between the
C-terminal glycine and Lys48 of ubiquitin. By immunoscreening a wheat cDNA
expression library with anti-E2(20 kDa) antibodies, a cDNA encoding the complete
protein was isolated. The clone (designated UBC7) was confirmed as encoding
E2(20 kDa) by comparison of the derived amino acid sequence with peptide
sequences of E2(20 kDa) tryptic fragments. The encoded protein contains a single
cysteine at position 91, which is presumably the active site, and has regions of
amino acid sequence similarity to other known E2s from plants and yeast.
Expression of this cDNA in Escherichia coli produced an active E2 capable of
catalyzing multiubiquitin chain formation in vitro. By virtue of its activity,
E2(20 kDa) may have a pivotal role in protein degradation by the ubiquitin-
dependent proteolytic pathway.

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