AI Article Synopsis

  • The discovery of SAMPs, ubiquitin-like proteins from Haloferax volcanii, led to a detailed analysis of archaeal Ubl protein genes and their related enzymes.
  • The study found that many archaea have two main groups of Ubl proteins, which are often associated more with tRNA modification than with thiamine or cofactor metabolism.
  • It is proposed that the original role of these archaeal Ubl proteins was to help insert sulfur into tRNAs, drawing parallels with the function of the URM1 protein in eukaryotes, suggesting interconnected systems for protein quality control across different biological processes.

Article Abstract

The recent discovery of protein modification by SAMPs, ubiquitin-like (Ubl) proteins from the archaeon Haloferax volcanii, prompted a comprehensive comparative-genomic analysis of archaeal Ubl protein genes and the genes for enzymes thought to be functionally associated with Ubl proteins. This analysis showed that most archaea encode members of two major groups of Ubl proteins with the β-grasp fold, the ThiS and MoaD families, and indicated that the ThiS family genes are rarely linked to genes for thiamine or Mo/W cofactor metabolism enzymes but instead are most often associated with genes for enzymes of tRNA modification. Therefore it is hypothesized that the ancestral function of the archaeal Ubl proteins is sulfur insertion into modified nucleotides in tRNAs, an activity analogous to that of the URM1 protein in eukaryotes. Together with additional, previously described genomic associations, these findings indicate that systems for protein quality control operating at different levels, including tRNA modification that controls translation fidelity, protein ubiquitination that regulates protein degradation, and, possibly, mRNA degradation by the exosome, are functionally and evolutionarily linked.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2948915PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2010/710303DOI Listing

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