Proteasomes are protein complexes which degrade unneeded or damaged proteins by proteolysis. They are part of a major mechanism by which cells regulate the concentration of particular proteins and degrade misfolded proteins. The importance of proteolytic degradation inside cells was acknowledged in the award of the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Aaron Ciechanover, Avram Hershko and Irwin Rose.
About Proteasome in brief

The first atomic structure of the 26S proteasomes was solved in 1994, and the first in human cells was in 2006, when the first human cells were sequenced. In eukaryotes, proteasomers are located both in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. In bacteria, they are found inside all eukARYotes and archaea, and in some bacteria. The inner two rings are made of seven β subunits that contain three to seven protease active sites. These sites are located on the interior surface of the rings, so that the target protein must enter the central pore before it is degraded. The outer two rings each contain seven α subunits whose function is to maintain a “gate” through which proteins enter the barrel. These alpha subunits are controlled by binding to regulatory particles that recognize polyubiquitin tags attached to protein substrates and initiate the degradation process. The protein degradation in cells was thought to rely mainly on lysosomes, membrane-bound organelles with acidic and protease-filled interiors that can degrade and then recycle exogenous proteins and aged or damaged organlles. However, work by Joseph Etlinger and Alfred Goldberg in 1977 on ATP-dependent protein degradation. in reticulocytes, which lack lysOSomes, suggested the presence of a second intracellular degradation mechanism. This was shown in 1978 to be composed of several distinct protein chains, a novelty among proteases.
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This page is based on the article Proteasome published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 04, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






