Previously unknown mechanism of protein degradation discovered by scientists

Previously unknown mechanism of protein degradation discovered by scientists

Short-lived ‍proteins control gene expression in cells to carry out a number of‌ vital ‍tasks, from ​helping ​the brain form connections to⁤ helping the body mount an immune​ defense. These proteins are made in the nucleus and are ⁢quickly destroyed once they’ve done‌ their job.

Despite their importance, the process by​ which these proteins get broken down ‍and removed from cells once they ​are no longer needed has eluded scientists for‌ decades—until⁣ now.

In a ‍cross-departmental collaboration, ⁤researchers from Harvard Medical School identified a protein called midnolin that plays a key role in degrading ​many short-lived nuclear proteins. The study shows that midnolin does​ so by ⁣directly grabbing‍ the proteins⁤ and pulling ⁢them into the cellular waste-disposal​ system, called the proteasome, ⁣where they are⁤ destroyed.

The findings are published Aug. 24 in Science.

“These ‍particular short-lived proteins have been known for over 40 years, ⁢but no one had established how they are actually degraded,” said co-lead author Xin Gu, a research fellow in neurobiology at HMS.

2023-08-24 ⁣16:00:04
Link from phys.org ⁤ rnrn

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