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The Roles of Ubiquitin in Mediating Autophagy.

Zhangyuan YinHana PopelkaYuchen LeiYing YangDaniel J Klionsky
Published in: Cells (2020)
Ubiquitination, the post-translational modification essential for various intracellular processes, is implicated in multiple aspects of autophagy, the major lysosome/vacuole-dependent degradation pathway. The autophagy machinery adopted the structural architecture of ubiquitin and employs two ubiquitin-like protein conjugation systems for autophagosome biogenesis. Ubiquitin chains that are attached as labels to protein aggregates or subcellular organelles confer selectivity, allowing autophagy receptors to simultaneously bind ubiquitinated cargos and autophagy-specific ubiquitin-like modifiers (Atg8-family proteins). Moreover, there is tremendous crosstalk between autophagy and the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Ubiquitination of autophagy-related proteins or regulatory components plays significant roles in the precise control of the autophagy pathway. In this review, we summarize and discuss the molecular mechanisms and functions of ubiquitin and ubiquitination, in the process and regulation of autophagy.
Keyphrases
  • cell death
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • signaling pathway
  • oxidative stress
  • small molecule
  • reactive oxygen species
  • single molecule
  • living cells
  • fluorescent probe