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deubiquitinase

Deubiquitinases (DUBs) are enzymes that remove ubiquitin from proteins or detach ubiquitin chains. By reversing ubiquitination, DUBs regulate protein stability, localization, and activity, influencing processes such as proteasomal degradation, signaling, DNA repair, and endocytosis.

DUBs fall into two broad catalytic classes: cysteine proteases (including ubiquitin-specific proteases USPs/UBPs, OTU domain proteases,

Functionally, DUBs can rescue substrates from degradation by removing degradative signals, generate free ubiquitin by processing

Notable examples include USP7 (HAUSP), which regulates p53 pathway components; CYLD, a negative regulator of NF-κB

DUBs are explored as therapeutic targets; dysregulation is linked to cancer, neurodegeneration, and immune disorders. Small-molecule

and
MJD
family)
and
metalloproteases
of
the
JAMM/MPN+
family
(for
example
Rpn11/PSMD14,
a
proteasome
subunit).
They
hydrolyze
isopeptide
bonds
between
ubiquitin
and
substrates
or
within
ubiquitin
chains.
Some
DUBs
show
preference
for
particular
ubiquitin
linkages,
such
as
K48
or
K63,
or
for
linear
chains.
precursor
ubiquitin,
and
shape
chain
architectures
to
regulate
signaling,
DNA
damage
response,
trafficking,
and
autophagy.
DUB
activity
is
controlled
by
localization,
cofactors,
post-translational
modifications,
and
allosteric
regulation.
signaling;
USP14
and
UCHL5,
which
associate
with
the
proteasome;
OTUB1;
and
BRCC36
and
AMSH,
which
participate
in
DNA
repair
and
endosomal
sorting.
inhibitors
and
modulators
have
been
developed
for
several
DUBs,
with
ongoing
efforts
to
achieve
selectivity
and
to
map
cellular
networks.
Research
approaches
include
activity-based
probes,
structural
biology,
and
genome
editing.