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FAT10ylation as a signal for proteasomal degradation.

Biochimica et biophysica acta (2013-01-22)
Gunter Schmidtke, Annette Aichem, Marcus Groettrup
ABSTRACT

The Nobel prize has been awarded for the discovery of ubiquitin as a transferable signal for the degradation of proteins by the 26S proteasome. While isopeptide linkage of a protein with a single ubiquitin does not serve as a degradation signal for the proteasome, poly-ubiquitylation via several different lysine residues within ubiquitin leads to efficient proteasomal degradation. Ubiquitin-like modifiers have not been shown to directly mediate proteasomal degradation except for the cytokine inducible modifier HLA-F adjacent transcript 10 (FAT10), which consists of two ubiquitin-like domains. FAT10 ends with a free diglycine motif at its C-terminus which is required for isopeptide linkage to hundreds of different substrates. In contrast to ubiquitin, a single FAT10 suffices to bind to the 26S proteasome and to efficiently mediate proteasomal degradation in a ubiquitin-independent manner. Here we review the data on ubiquitin-independent degradation by FAT10, on how FAT10 is conjugated to its substrates, how FAT10 binds to the 26S proteasome, and how the ubiquitin-like (UBL)-ubiquitin-associated (UBA) protein NUB1L accelerates FAT10 mediated proteolysis. Finally, with a glimpse on recently identified substrates, we will discuss the currently emerging knowledge about the biological functions of FAT10. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Ubiquitin-Proteasome System. Guest Editors: Thomas Sommer and Dieter H. Wolf.

MATERIALS
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Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-FAT10 antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone FAT10-7, purified from hybridoma cell culture