RCSB PDB Group Summary: P63048

Help  
Member 1 of 53

Ubiquitin-ribosomal protein eL40 fusion protein

UniProtKB accession:  P63048
Grouped By:  Matching UniProtKB accession
Group Content:  
Polymer Entities matching query 53
Go to UniProtKB:  P63048
UniProtKB description:  Exists either covalently attached to another protein, or free (unanchored). When covalently bound, it is conjugated to target proteins via an isopeptide bond either as a monomer (monoubiquitin), a polymer linked via different Lys residues of the ubiquitin (polyubiquitin chains) or a linear polymer linked via the initiator Met of the ubiquitin (linear polyubiquitin chains). Polyubiquitin chains, when attached to a target protein, have different functions depending on the Lys residue of the ubiquitin that is linked: Lys-6-linked may be involved in DNA repair; Lys-11-linked is involved in ERAD (endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation) and in cell-cycle regulation; Lys-29-linked is involved in proteotoxic stress response and cell cycle; Lys-33-linked is involved in kinase modification; Lys-48-linked is involved in protein degradation via the proteasome; Lys-63-linked is involved in endocytosis, DNA-damage responses as well as in signaling processes leading to activation of the transcription factor NF-kappa-B. Linear polymer chains formed via attachment by the initiator Met lead to cell signaling. Ubiquitin is usually conjugated to Lys residues of target proteins, however, in rare cases, conjugation to Cys or Ser residues has been observed. When polyubiquitin is free (unanchored-polyubiquitin), it also has distinct roles, such as in activation of protein kinases, and in signaling.
Group Members:
Query History
1 / 1
Release Date:


Structure Features
Determination Methodology


Sequence Features
Number of Source Taxonomies


Experimental Features
Experimental Method
Resolution


Organisms
Organism
[ 42+ ]
Taxonomy


Protein Domains
SCOP/SCOPe Domain
CATH Domain
ECOD Domain
PFAM Domain
InterPro Domain


Function
GO Molecular Function
GO Biological Process
GO Cellular Component