Human Interaction Network Ontology

Last uploaded: June 27, 2014
Preferred Name

Monoubiquitination of N-myristoyl GAG (P12493) protein
Synonyms
Definitions

Authored: Garapati, P V, 2011-01-18 Reviewed: Zhang, DE, 2011--0-2- Cytosolic N-myristoyl Gag polyprotein is conjugated with a single molecule of ubiquitin. Conjugation is typically to one of two lysine residues in the p6 domain of Gag but can be to lysine residues in the MA, CA, NC, and SP2 domains of the protein. The specific host cell E2 and E3 proteins that mediate Gag ubiquitination have not been identified. The same studies that first identified the p6 ubiquitination sites in Gag also called the biological significance of Gag ubiquitination into question by demonstrating that Gag proteins in which the p6 ubiquitination sites had been removed by mutagenesis could still assemble efficiently into infectious viral particles (Ott et al. 1998, 2000). More recent work, however, has identified additional ubiquitination sites throughout the C-terminal region of the Gag polyprotein, and when all of these sites are removed by mutagenesis, both viral assembly involving the mutant Gag polyprotein and infectivity of the resulting viral particles are sharply reduced (Gottwein et al. 2006). Note: Reactions directly involving interactions of human host proteins with foreign ones are highlighted in red. Edited: Garapati, P V, 2011-01-18

ID

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0007133

comment

Authored: Garapati, P V, 2011-01-18

Reviewed: Zhang, DE, 2011--0-2-

Cytosolic N-myristoyl Gag polyprotein is conjugated with a single molecule of ubiquitin. Conjugation is typically to one of two lysine residues in the p6 domain of Gag but can be to lysine residues in the MA, CA, NC, and SP2 domains of the protein. The specific host cell E2 and E3 proteins that mediate Gag ubiquitination have not been identified. The same studies that first identified the p6 ubiquitination sites in Gag also called the biological significance of Gag ubiquitination into question by demonstrating that Gag proteins in which the p6 ubiquitination sites had been removed by mutagenesis could still assemble efficiently into infectious viral particles (Ott et al. 1998, 2000). More recent work, however, has identified additional ubiquitination sites throughout the C-terminal region of the Gag polyprotein, and when all of these sites are removed by mutagenesis, both viral assembly involving the mutant Gag polyprotein and infectivity of the resulting viral particles are sharply reduced (Gottwein et al. 2006). Note: Reactions directly involving interactions of human host proteins with foreign ones are highlighted in red.

Edited: Garapati, P V, 2011-01-18

definition source

Pubmed16775314

Reactome, http://www.reactome.org

Pubmed11112487

Pubmed9525617

has input

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0019325

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UniProt_P12493

has output

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0005126

label

Monoubiquitination of N-myristoyl GAG (P12493) protein

prefixIRI

HINO:0007133

prefLabel

Monoubiquitination of N-myristoyl GAG (P12493) protein

seeAlso

ReactomeREACT_115813

Reactome Database ID Release 431169307

subClassOf

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/INO_0000040

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