Parkin Auto-Ubiquitination Kit

Catalog #: K-105 Datasheet / COA / SDS

Discontinued Product

K-105 has been discontinued.
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Parkin Auto-Ubiquitination Kit Summary

Specifications

Source
N/A
Shipping Conditions
The product is shipped with dry ice or equivalent. Upon receipt, store it immediately at the temperature recommended below.
Storage
Store the unopened product at -70 °C. Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles. Do not use past expiration date.
Species
Human

Product Datasheets

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Background: Parkin

Parkin, also known as Parkinson Juvenile Disease Protein 2, is a 465 amino acid (aa), cytoplasmic and mitochondrial enzyme with a predicted molecular weight of 51.5 kDa, that functions as a RING-type Ubiquitin ligase (E3). Human Parkin shares 75% and 78% aa sequence identity with mouse and rat Parkin, respectively. Human Parkin2 lacks exon 5 which encodes aa 179-206 of Parkin. The structure of Parkin includes an N-terminal Ubiquitin-like motif and a C-terminal RING domain composed of two RING finger motifs separated by two IBR domains. Parkin functions in conjunction with the Ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzymes UbcH7, UbcH8, and Ubc13/Uev1. Together with PTEN-induced Putative Kinase 1 (PINK1), Parkin is important for maintaining functional mitochondria. Parkin is recruited to dysfunctional mitochondria in a PINK1-dependent manner, where it ubiquitinates outer mitochondrial proteins and drives autophagic degradation. Parkin is expressed in heart, testis, and skeletal muscle but is detected at the highest levels in brain. Mitochondrial dysfunction is thought to be central to the pathogenesis of Parkinsons disease (PD). This hypothesis is supported by the fact that mutations in Parkin and PINK1 result in recessive forms of the disease. Parkin is also thought to exert neuroprotective effects via regulation of the unfolded-protein stress response and targeting of various substrates for proteasomal degradation. Mutations in Parkin often affect E3 ligase activity through decreased E2 and/or substrate interactions, which result in the dysfunction of proteasomal degradation pathways and the neurotoxic accumulation of misfolded proteins.

References
  1. Cookson M. R. et al. (2003) Hum. Mol. Genet. 12:2975-2965
  2. Dawson T. M. and Dawson V. L. (2003) J. Clin. Invest. 111:145-151
  3. Doss-Pepe E. W. et al. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280:16619-16624
  4. Imai Y. et al. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275:35661-35664
  5. Kitada T. et al (1998) Nature 392:605:608
  6. Martinez-Noel G. et al. (2001) Eur. J. Biochem 268:5912-5919
  7. Moore D. J. (2006) Biochem. Soc. Trans. 34:749-753
  8. Sakata E. et al. (2003) EMBO J. Report 4:301-306
  9. Tanaka K. et al. (2004) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1695:226-238
  10. Yamamoto A. et al. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 280:3390-3399
  11. Zhang Y. et al. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 97:13354-13359
Long Name
Parkinson Disease [autosomal recessive, juvenile] 2, Parkin [PARK2], transcript variant 1
Entrez Gene IDs
5071 (Human); 50873 (Mouse); 56816 (Rat)
Alternate Names
AR-JP; E3 ubiquitin ligase; E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase parkin; EC 6.3.2.-; LPRS2; PARK2; parkin 2; Parkin; Parkinson disease protein 2; Parkinson juvenile disease protein 2; parkinson protein 2, E3 ubiquitin protein ligase (parkin); PDJ; PDJjuvenile) 2, parkin; PRKN

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