UBB pseudogene 4 encodes functional ubiquitin variants

Pseudogenes are mutated copies of protein-coding genes that cannot be translated into proteins, but a small subset of pseudogenes has been detected at the protein level. Although ubiquitin pseudogenes represent one of the most abundant pseudogene families in many organisms, little is known about the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-03, Vol.11 (1), p.1306-1306, Article 1306
Hauptverfasser: Dubois, Marie-Line, Meller, Anna, Samandi, Sondos, Brunelle, Mylène, Frion, Julie, Brunet, Marie A., Toupin, Amanda, Beaudoin, Maxime C., Jacques, Jean-François, Lévesque, Dominique, Scott, Michelle S., Lavigne, Pierre, Roucou, Xavier, Boisvert, François-Michel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pseudogenes are mutated copies of protein-coding genes that cannot be translated into proteins, but a small subset of pseudogenes has been detected at the protein level. Although ubiquitin pseudogenes represent one of the most abundant pseudogene families in many organisms, little is known about their expression and signaling potential. By re-analyzing public RNA-sequencing and proteomics datasets, we here provide evidence for the expression of several ubiquitin pseudogenes including UBB pseudogene 4 ( UBBP4 ), which encodes Ub KEKS (Q2K, K33E, Q49K, N60S). The functional consequences of Ub KEKS conjugation appear to differ from canonical ubiquitylation. Quantitative proteomics shows that Ub KEKS modifies specific proteins including lamins. Knockout of UBBP4 results in slower cell division, and accumulation of lamin A within the nucleolus. Our work suggests that a subset of proteins reported as ubiquitin targets may instead be modified by ubiquitin variants that are the products of wrongly annotated pseudogenes and induce different functional effects. Ubiquitin pseudogenes are present in many organisms but whether they encode functional proteins has remained unclear. Here, the authors show that human UBB pseudogene 4 produces ubiquitin variants with amino acid compositions and cellular functions that are distinct from canonical ubiquitin.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-15090-6