Intracellular protein degradation from a vague idea through the lysosome and the ubiquitin-proteasome system and on to human diseases and drug targeting: Nobel Lecture, December 8, 2004
- PMID: 18083918
- DOI: 10.1196/annals.1402.078
Intracellular protein degradation from a vague idea through the lysosome and the ubiquitin-proteasome system and on to human diseases and drug targeting: Nobel Lecture, December 8, 2004
Abstract
Between the 1950s and 1980s, scientists were focusing mostly on how the genetic code is transcribed to RNA and translated to proteins, but how proteins are degraded has remained a neglected research area. With the discovery of the lysosome by Christian de Duve, it was assumed that cellular proteins are degraded within this organelle. Yet, several independent lines of experimental evidence strongly suggested that intracellular proteolysis is largely nonlysosomal, but the mechanisms involved had remained obscure. The discovery of the ubiquitin-proteasome system resolved this enigma. We now recognize that ubiquitin- and proteasome-mediated degradation of intracellular proteins is involved in the regulation of a broad array of cellular processes, such as cell cycle and division, regulation of transcription factors, and assurance of the cellular quality control. Not surprisingly, aberrations in the system have been implicated in the pathogenesis of many human diseases, malignancies, and neurodegenerative disorders among them, which led subsequently to an increasing effort to develop mechanism-based drugs; one is already in use.
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