v5.1.0.3
Glycine data from LIS
Type | Family |
Description | The post-translational attachment of ubiquitin ( ) to proteins (ubiquitinylation) alters the function, location or trafficking of a protein, or targets it to the 26S proteasome for degradation [ , , ]. Ubiquitinylation is an ATP-dependent process that involves the action of at least three enzymes: a ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1), a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2, ), and a ubiquitin ligase (E3, , ), which work sequentially in a cascade [ ]. The E1 enzyme is responsible for activating ubiquitin, the first step in ubiquitinylation. The E1 enzyme hydrolyses ATP and adenylates the C-terminal glycine residue of ubiquitin, and then links this residue to the active site cysteine of E1, yielding a ubiquitin-thioester and free AMP. To be fully active, E1 must non-covalently bind to and adenylate a second ubiquitin molecule. The E1 enzyme can then transfer the thioester-linked ubiquitin molecule to a cysteine residue on the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, E2, in an ATP-dependent reaction. |
Short Name | UBQ-activ_enz_E1 |