IIBIO   27936
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOTECNOLOGICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
DNA-damage inducible protein 1 is a conserved metacaspase substrate that is cleaved and further destabilized in yeast under specific metabolic conditions
Autor/es:
NIEMIROWICZ, GABRIELA T.; ALVAREZ, VANINA E.; SALAS-SARDUY, EMIR; SALAS-SARDUY, EMIR; BOUVIER, LEÓN A.; CAZZULO, JUAN JOSÉ; BOUVIER, LEÓN A.; CAZZULO, JUAN JOSÉ; NIEMIROWICZ, GABRIELA T.; ALVAREZ, VANINA E.
Revista:
FEBS JOURNAL
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2018 vol. 285 p. 1097 - 1110
ISSN:
1742-464X
Resumen:
Metacaspases, distant relatives of metazoan caspases, have been shown to participate in programmed cell death in plants and in progression of the cell cycle and removal of protein aggregates in unicellular eukaryotes. However, since natural proteolytic substrates have scarcely been identified to date, their roles in these processes remain unclear. Here, we report that the DNA-damage inducible protein 1 (Ddi1) represents a conserved protein substrate for metacaspases belonging to divergent unicellular eukaryotes (trypanosomes and yeasts). We show that although the recognized cleavage sequence is not identical among the different model organisms tested, in all of them the proteolysis consequence is the removal of the ubiquitin-associated domain (UBA) present in the protein. We also demonstrate that Ddi1 cleavage is tightly regulated in vivo as it only takes place in yeast when calcium increases but under specific metabolic conditions. Finally, we show that metacaspase-mediated Ddi1 cleavage reduces the stability of this protein which can certainly impact on the many functions ascribed for it, including shuttle to the proteasome, cell cycle control, late secretory pathway regulation, among others.