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© William Beaucardet
Reportage Laboratoire des Anticorps en Thérapie et Pathologie
Publication : Cell death and differentiation

Ubiquitin signaling in neurodegenerative diseases: an autophagy and proteasome perspective.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Cell death and differentiation - 01 Feb 2021

Le Guerroué F, Youle RJ

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 33208890

Link to DOI – 10.1038/s41418-020-00667-x

Cell Death Differ 2021 Feb; 28(2): 439-454

Ubiquitin signaling is a sequence of events driving the fate of a protein based on the type of ubiquitin modifications attached. In the case of neurodegenerative diseases, ubiquitin signaling is mainly associated with degradation signals to process aberrant proteins, which form aggregates often fatal for the brain cells. This signaling is often perturbed by the aggregates themselves and leads to the accumulation of toxic aggregates and inclusion bodies that are deleterious due to a toxic gain of function. Decrease in quality control pathways is often seen with age and is a critical onset for the development of neurodegeneration. Many aggregates are now thought to propagate in a prion-like manner, where mutated proteins acting like seeds are transitioning from cell to cell, converting normal proteins to toxic aggregates. Modulation of ubiquitin signaling, by stimulating ubiquitin ligase activation, is a potential therapeutic strategy to treat patients with neurodegeneration diseases.