A minimal glycine-alanine repeat prevents the interaction of ubiquitinated IκBα with the proteasome: a new mechanism for selective inhibition of proteolysis
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Medicine
- Vol. 4 (8) , 939-944
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0898-939
Abstract
The Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen 1 contains a glycine-alanine repeat that inhibits in cis MHC class I-restricted presentation. We report here that insertion of a minimal glycine-alanine repeat motif in different positions of I kappaB alpha protects this NF-kappaB inhibitor from signal-induced degradation dependent on ubiquitin-proteasome, and decreases its basal turnover in vivo resulting in constitutive dominant-negative mutants. The chimeras are phosphorylated and ubiquitinated in response to tumor necrosis factor alpha, but are then released from NF-kappaB and fail to associate with the proteasome. This explains how functionally competent I kappaB alpha is protected from proteasomal disruption and identifies the glycine-alanine repeat as a new regulator of proteolysis.Keywords
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