Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle

Abstract Physical activity or regular exercise provides many beneficial effects towards human health, helping prevent and ameliorate metabolic diseases. However, certain molecular mechanisms that mediate these health benefits remain poorly understood. Parker et al. provided the first global analysis...

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Main Authors: Samuel O. Lord, Yu‐Chiang Lai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-06-01
Series:FASEB BioAdvances
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1096/fba.2021-00142
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author Samuel O. Lord
Yu‐Chiang Lai
author_facet Samuel O. Lord
Yu‐Chiang Lai
author_sort Samuel O. Lord
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Physical activity or regular exercise provides many beneficial effects towards human health, helping prevent and ameliorate metabolic diseases. However, certain molecular mechanisms that mediate these health benefits remain poorly understood. Parker et al. provided the first global analysis of exercise‐regulated ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle, revealing post‐translational modification cross‐talk. As a result of their analysis, NEDDylation is thought to promote ubiquitin signalling for the removal of damaged proteins following exercise. The proteomic dataset generated from their study is invaluable for researchers in this field to validate new mechanistic hypotheses. To further reveal molecular mechanisms regulated by exercise, future research could employ more sensitive mass spectrometry‐based workflows that increase the detection of both ubiquitylated sites and peptides and subsequently identify more exercise‐regulated ubiquitin signalling pathways.
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spelling doaj.art-b43e2bfa45234d82ae9e73d1f0779bea2022-12-22T00:26:08ZengWileyFASEB BioAdvances2573-98322022-06-014640240710.1096/fba.2021-00142Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscleSamuel O. Lord0Yu‐Chiang Lai1School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UKSchool of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UKAbstract Physical activity or regular exercise provides many beneficial effects towards human health, helping prevent and ameliorate metabolic diseases. However, certain molecular mechanisms that mediate these health benefits remain poorly understood. Parker et al. provided the first global analysis of exercise‐regulated ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle, revealing post‐translational modification cross‐talk. As a result of their analysis, NEDDylation is thought to promote ubiquitin signalling for the removal of damaged proteins following exercise. The proteomic dataset generated from their study is invaluable for researchers in this field to validate new mechanistic hypotheses. To further reveal molecular mechanisms regulated by exercise, future research could employ more sensitive mass spectrometry‐based workflows that increase the detection of both ubiquitylated sites and peptides and subsequently identify more exercise‐regulated ubiquitin signalling pathways.https://doi.org/10.1096/fba.2021-00142mass spectrometryNEDDylationphysical activityubiquitylationubiquitylome
spellingShingle Samuel O. Lord
Yu‐Chiang Lai
Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
FASEB BioAdvances
mass spectrometry
NEDDylation
physical activity
ubiquitylation
ubiquitylome
title Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
title_full Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
title_fullStr Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
title_full_unstemmed Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
title_short Exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
title_sort exercise mediates ubiquitin signalling in human skeletal muscle
topic mass spectrometry
NEDDylation
physical activity
ubiquitylation
ubiquitylome
url https://doi.org/10.1096/fba.2021-00142
work_keys_str_mv AT samuelolord exercisemediatesubiquitinsignallinginhumanskeletalmuscle
AT yuchianglai exercisemediatesubiquitinsignallinginhumanskeletalmuscle