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Field | Value |
---|---|
Namespace | Biological process |
Short description | Proteasome regulatory particle assembly |
Full defintion | The aggregation, arrangement and bonding together of a mature, active proteasome regulatory particle complex. |
Subterm of |
The relationship of GO:0070682 with other GO terms.
Relationship type | GO terms |
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Is a | |
Regulates | n.a. |
Part of | n.a. |
Positively regulates | n.a. |
Negatively regulates | n.a. |
A force layout showing the ancestor tree for GO:0070682, and its immediate children. If you wish to explore the tree dynamically, please use the GO Explorer.
This table contains additional metadata associated with the GO entry's definition field.
Field | Value |
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GOC | rb |
PMID | Chaperone-mediated pathway of proteasome regulatory particle assembly. Nature. 2009 Jun 11; 459 (7248): 861–5.PMID: 19412159 The proteasome is a protease that controls diverse processes in eukaryotic cells. Its regulatory particle (RP) initiates the degradation of ubiquitin-protein conjugates by unfolding the substrate and translocating it into the proteasome core particle (CP) to be degraded. The RP has 19 subunits, and their pathway of assembly is not understood. Here we show that in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae three proteins are found associated with RP but not with the RP-CP holoenzyme: Nas6, Rpn14 and Hsm3. Mutations in the corresponding genes confer proteasome loss-of-function phenotypes, despite their virtual absence from the holoenzyme. These effects result from deficient RP assembly. Thus, Nas6, Rpn14 and Hsm3 are RP chaperones. The RP contains six ATPases-the Rpt proteins-and each RP chaperone binds to the carboxy-terminal domain of a specific Rpt. We show in an accompanying study that RP assembly is templated through the Rpt C termini, apparently by their insertion into binding pockets in the CP. Thus, RP chaperones may regulate proteasome assembly by directly restricting the accessibility of Rpt C termini to the CP. In addition, competition between the RP chaperones and the CP for Rpt engagement may explain the release of RP chaperones as proteasomes mature. |
GO predictions are based solely on the InterPro-to-GO mappings published by EMBL-EBI, which are in turn based on the mapping of predicted domains to the InterPro dataset. The InterPro-to-GO mapping was last updated on , while the GO metadata was last updated on .
Transcript | Name | Description | GO terms | GO count |
---|---|---|---|---|
– | 26S proteasome non-ATPase regulatory subunit 9; TAIR: AT5G57950.1 26S proteasome regulatory subunit; Swiss-Prot: sp|O94393|PSMD9_SCHPO Probable 26S proteasome regulatory subunit p27; TrEMBL-Plants: tr|I3SW57|I3SW57_LOTJA Uncharacterized protein; Found in the gene: LotjaGi6g1v0203400 | 1 |
A list of co-occurring GO terms within the L. japonicus gene space:
GO term | Namespace | Name | Observations | Saturation (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Biological process | Proteasome regulatory particle assembly | 1 | 100.00 |