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Browse result for Absence in Polyubiquitination

※ introduction

    Polyubiquitination is the formation of a ubiquitin chain on a single lysine residue on the substrate protein. Following addition of a single ubiquitin moiety to a protein substrate, further ubiquitin molecules can be added to the first, yielding a polyubiquitin chain. These chains are made by linking the glycine residue of a ubiquitin molecule to a lysine of ubiquitin bound to a substrate. Ubiquitin has seven lysine residues and an N-terminus that may serve as points of ubiquitination; they are K6, K11, K27, K29, K33, K48, and K63. Lysine 48-linked chains were the first identified and are the best-characterised type of ubiquitin chain. K63 chains have also been well-characterised, whereas the function of other lysine chains, mixed chains, branched chains, N-terminal linear chains, and heterologous chains (mixtures of ubiquitin and other ubiquitin-like proteins) remains more unclear.

Reference
Wiki: Polyubiquitination



PTMD IDUniProt AccessionEntrez IDGene NameProtein NameOrganism
PTMD00022P4693710413
YAP1
Transcriptional coactivator YAP1
Homo sapiens
PTMD00026P481634199
ME1
NADP-dependent malic enzyme
Homo sapiens
PTMD00027P011064609
MYC
Myc proto-oncogene protein
Homo sapiens