AI Article Synopsis

  • Ubiquitin modifications play a crucial role in altering protein function and stability, impacting cell survival, especially during stress like ischemic stroke.
  • In a study using a proteomics approach on mice, researchers identified 198 proteins that were ubiquitinated post-stroke, many of which are vital for the structure of glutamatergic neurons' postsynaptic density (PSD).
  • The study revealed that ubiquitination affects kinase activities associated with neuronal cell injury, with specific kinases showing altered activities after stroke; removing ubiquitin reversed these changes, highlighting its critical role in regulating kinases during ischemic injury.

Article Abstract

Ubiquitin modifications alter protein function and stability, thereby regulating cell homeostasis and viability, particularly under stress. Ischemic stroke induces protein ubiquitination at the ischemic periphery, wherein cells remain viable, however the identity of ubiquitinated proteins is unknown. Here, we employed a proteomics approach to identify these proteins in mice undergoing ischemic stroke. The data are available in a searchable web interface ( https://hochrainerlab.shinyapps.io/StrokeUbiOmics/ ). We detected increased ubiquitination of 198 proteins, many of which localize to the postsynaptic density (PSD) of glutamatergic neurons. Among these were proteins essential for maintaining PSD architecture, such as PSD95, as well as NMDA and AMPA receptor subunits. The largest enzymatic group at the PSD with elevated post-ischemic ubiquitination were kinases, such as CaMKII, PKC, Cdk5, and Pyk2, whose aberrant activities are well-known to contribute to post-ischemic neuronal death. Concurrent phospho-proteomics revealed altered PSD-associated phosphorylation patterns, indicative of modified kinase activities following stroke. PSD-located CaMKII, PKC, and Cdk5 activities were decreased while Pyk2 activity was increased after stroke. Removal of ubiquitin restored kinase activities to pre-stroke levels, identifying ubiquitination as the responsible molecular mechanism for post-ischemic kinase regulation. These findings unveil a previously unrecognized role of ubiquitination in the regulation of essential kinases involved in ischemic injury.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10937959PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06009-8DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Ubiquitin modifications play a crucial role in altering protein function and stability, impacting cell survival, especially during stress like ischemic stroke.
  • In a study using a proteomics approach on mice, researchers identified 198 proteins that were ubiquitinated post-stroke, many of which are vital for the structure of glutamatergic neurons' postsynaptic density (PSD).
  • The study revealed that ubiquitination affects kinase activities associated with neuronal cell injury, with specific kinases showing altered activities after stroke; removing ubiquitin reversed these changes, highlighting its critical role in regulating kinases during ischemic injury.
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Ubiquitin modifications alter protein function and stability, thereby regulating cell homeostasis and viability, particularly under stress. Ischemic stroke induces protein ubiquitination at the ischemic periphery, wherein cells remain viable, however the identity of ubiquitinated proteins is unknown. Here, we employed a proteomics approach to identify these proteins in mice undergoing ischemic stroke.

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