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Publication : Proteasomes activate aggresome disassembly and clearance by producing unanchored ubiquitin chains.

First Author  Hao R Year  2013
Journal  Mol Cell Volume  51
Issue  6 Pages  819-28
PubMed ID  24035499 Mgi Jnum  J:205924
Mgi Id  MGI:5547436 Doi  10.1016/j.molcel.2013.08.016
Citation  Hao R, et al. (2013) Proteasomes activate aggresome disassembly and clearance by producing unanchored ubiquitin chains. Mol Cell 51(6):819-28
abstractText  Aberrant protein aggregation is a dominant pathological feature in neurodegenerative diseases. Protein aggregates cannot be processed by the proteasome; instead, they are frequently concentrated to the aggresome, a perinuclear inclusion body, and subsequently removed by autophagy. Paradoxically, proteasomes are also concentrated at aggresomes and other related inclusion bodies prevalent in neurodegenerative disease. Here, we show that proteasomes are crucial components in aggresome clearance. The disassembly and disposal of aggresomes requires Poh1, a proteasomal deubiquitinating enzyme that cleaves ubiquitinated proteins and releases ubiquitin chains. In Poh1-deficient cells, aggresome clearance is blocked. Remarkably, microinjection of free lysine (K) 63-linked ubiquitin chains restores aggresome degradation. We present evidence that free ubiquitin chains produced by Poh1 bind and activate the deacetylase HDAC6, which, in turn, stimulates actinomyosin- and autophagy-dependent aggresome processing. Thus, unanchored ubiquitin chains are key signaling molecules that connect and coordinate the proteasome and autophagy to eliminate toxic protein aggregates.
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