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Publication Date:
June 2005
ISSN:
1437-4315
DOI:
10.1515/BC.2003.110

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Editor-in-Chief: Brüne, Bernhard

Editorial Board Member: Ludwig, Stephan / Sies, Helmut / Stoffel, Markus / Turk, Boris / Wittinghofer, Alfred / Baumeister, Wolfgang / Bergeron, John / Bogyo, Matthew / Bürkle, Alexander / Cadenas, Enrique / Chiti, Fabrizio / Dikic, Ivan / Dobson, Christopher / Driessen, Arnold / Fritz, Hans / Gevaert, Kris / Hammann, Christian / Hartl, F. Ulrich / Häussinger, Dieter / Hiscott, John / Igarashi, Yasuyuki / Klotz, Lars-Oliver / Krüger, Achim / Magdolen, Viktor / Müschen, Markus / Narumiya, Shuh / Naumann, Michael / Pejler, Gunnar / Pfanner, Nikolaus / Pike, Robert / Potempa, Jan / Saftig, Paul / Sandhoff, Konrad / Schaffner, Walter / Sinning, Irmgard / Sommerhoff, Christian P.

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Protein Prenyltransferases: Anchor Size, Pseudogenes and Parasites

S. Maurer-Stroh / S. Washietl / F. Eisenhaber

Citation Information: Biological Chemistry. Volume 384, Issue 7, Pages 977–989, ISSN (Print) 1431-6730, DOI: 10.1515/BC.2003.110, June 2005

Publication History:
Published Online:
2005-06-01

Abstract

Lipid modification of eukaryotic proteins by protein prenyltransferases is required for critical signaling pathways, cell cycle progression, cytoskeleton remodeling, induction of apoptosis and vesicular trafficking. This review analyzes the influence of distinct states of sequential posttranslational processing that can be obtained after single or double prenylation, reversible palmitoylation, proteolytic cleavage of the C-terminus and possible reversible carboxymethylation. This series of modifications, as well as the exact length of the prenyl anchor, are determinants in protein-membrane and specific protein-protein interactions of protein prenyltransferase substrates. Furthermore, the occurrence and distribution of pseudogenes of protein prenyltransferase subunits are discussed. Besides being developed as anti-cancer agents, prenyltransferase inhibitors are effective against an increasing number of parasitic diseases. Extensive screens for protein prenyltransferases in genomic data of fungal and protozoan pathogens unveil a series of new pharmacologic targets for prenyltransferase inhibition, including the parasites Brugia malayi, Onchocerca volvulus, Aspergillus nidulans, Pneumocystis carinii, Entamoeba histolytica, Strongyloides stercoralis, Trichinella spiralis and Cryptosporidium parvum.

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