Life and death of proteins after protease cleavage: protein degradation by the N-end rule pathway
- PMID: 28581033
- DOI: 10.1111/nph.14619
Life and death of proteins after protease cleavage: protein degradation by the N-end rule pathway
Abstract
Contents Summary 929 I.
Introduction: conservation and diversity of N-end rule pathways 929 II. Defensive functions of the N-end rule pathway in plants 930 III. Proteases and degradation by the N-end rule pathway 930 IV. New proteomics approaches for the identification of N-end rule substrates 932 V. Concluding remarks 932 Acknowledgements 934 References 934 SUMMARY: The N-end rule relates the stability of a protein to the identity of its N-terminal residue and some of its modifications. Since its discovery in the 1980s, the repertoire of N-terminal degradation signals has expanded, leading to a diversity of N-end rule pathways. Although some of these newly discovered N-end rule pathways remain largely unexplored in plants, recent discoveries have highlighted roles of N-end rule-mediated protein degradation in plant defense against pathogens and in cell proliferation during organ growth. Despite this progress, a bottleneck remains the proteome-wide identification of N-end rule substrates due to the prerequisite for endoproteolytic cleavage and technical limitations. Here, we discuss the recent diversification of N-end rule pathways and their newly discovered functions in plant defenses, stressing the role of proteases. We expect that novel proteomics techniques (N-terminomics) will be essential for substrate identification. We review these methods, their limitations and future developments.
Keywords: N-degron; N-end rule pathway; N-recognins; N-terminomics; arginylation; cysteine oxidation; proteases; ubiquitin-proteasome system.
© 2017 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2017 New Phytologist Trust.
Comment in
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Unravelling the mode of action of plant proteases.New Phytol. 2018 May;218(3):879-881. doi: 10.1111/nph.15156. New Phytol. 2018. PMID: 29658638 No abstract available.
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