4.8 Article

The midnolin-proteasome pathway catches proteins for ubiquitination-independent degradation

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 381, Issue 6660, Pages 849-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.adh5021

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Cells use ubiquitin to mark proteins for degradation, but the mechanism for the degradation of some proteins is unclear. This study found that midnolin promotes the degradation of nuclear proteins by binding to the proteasome, binding to substrates, and using a ubiquitin-like domain to promote substrate degradation.
Cells use ubiquitin to mark proteins for proteasomal degradation. Although the proteasome also eliminates proteins that are not ubiquitinated, how this occurs mechanistically is unclear. Here, we found that midnolin promoted the destruction of many nuclear proteins, including transcription factors encoded by the immediate-early genes. Diverse stimuli induced midnolin, and its overexpression was sufficient to cause the degradation of its targets by a mechanism that did not require ubiquitination. Instead, midnolin associated with the proteasome via an a helix, used its Catch domain to bind a region within substrates that can form a beta strand, and used a ubiquitin-like domain to promote substrate destruction. Thus, midnolin contains three regions that function in concert to target a large set of nuclear proteins to the proteasome for degradation.

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