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※ introduction

    Ubiquitination (also known as ubiquitylation) is an enzymatic, post-translational modification (PTM) process in which a ubiquitin protein is attached to a substrate protein. This process most commonly binds the last amino acid of ubiquitin (glycine 76) to a lysine residue on the substrate. An isopeptide bond is formed between the carboxylic acid group of the ubiquitin's glycine and the epsilon amino group of the substrate's lysine. Cases are known in which the amine group of a protein's N-terminus is used for ubiquitination, rather than a lysine residue. In a few rare cases nonlysine residues have been identified as ubiquitination targets, such as cysteine, threonine and serine. The end result of this process is the addition of one ubiquitin molecule (monoubiquitination) or a chain of ubiquitin molecules (polyubiquitination) to the substrate protein.

Reference
Wiki: Ubiquitination



PTMD IDUniProt AccessionEntrez IDGene NameProtein NameOrganism
PTMD00149Q154668431
NR0B2
Nuclear receptor subfamily 0 group B member 2
Homo sapiens