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 Origin and function of ubiquitin-like proteins Hochstrasser MNature  2009[Mar]; 458 (7237): 422-9Eukaryotic proteins can be modified through attachment to various small molecules  and proteins. One such modification is conjugation to ubiquitin and  ubiquitin-like proteins (UBLs), which controls an enormous range of physiological  processes. Bound UBLs mainly regulate the interactions of proteins with other  macromolecules, for example binding to the proteasome or recruitment to  chromatin. The various UBL systems use related enzymes to attach specific UBLs to  proteins (or other molecules), and most of these attachments are transient. There  is increasing evidence suggesting that such UBL-protein modification evolved from  prokaryotic sulphurtransferase systems or related enzymes. Moreover, proteins  similar to UBL-conjugating enzymes and UBL-deconjugating enzymes seem to have  already been widespread at the time of the last common ancestor of eukaryotes,  suggesting that UBL-protein conjugation did not first evolve in eukaryotes.|*Evolution, Molecular[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism[MESH]|Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism[MESH]|Sulfur/metabolism[MESH]|Ubiquitination[MESH]|Ubiquitins/chemistry/*metabolism[MESH]
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