Selective Autophagy Mediated by Protein Ubiquitination in Major Prevalent Zoonoses
Chi Meng, Fengyuan Jiao, Gengxu Zhou, Lingjie Wang, Shengping Wu, Cailiang Fan, Jixiang Li, Liting Cao, Zuoyong Zhou, Yuefeng Chu, Hanwei Jiao

TL;DR
This paper explores how zoonotic pathogens disrupt protein ubiquitination and autophagy to survive in hosts, offering new insights for treating zoonoses.
Contribution
It reviews mechanisms by which pathogens interfere with protein degradation pathways in zoonotic diseases.
Findings
Zoonotic pathogens can interfere with ubiquitination and autophagy to resist host immune defenses.
Disruption of these pathways promotes pathogen replication and survival.
Understanding these mechanisms may lead to new treatments for zoonotic diseases.
Abstract
Zoonotic diseases not only cause great harm to animal health but also involve the development of animal husbandry, which in turn endangers human life and health and public health safety. Protein ubiquitination and autophagy are important ways for the body to degrade invading pathogens, which correspond to the ubiquitin (Ub)‐proteasome system (UPS) and autophagic lysosomal pathway (ALP), respectively, and play an important role in the occurrence and development of diseases. For UPS, the substrate is delivered to the 26S proteasome system via a ubiquitination cascade and subsequently degraded and removed. For ALP, the substrate is encapsulated to form autophagosomes, which subsequently fuse with lysosomes to form autophagolysosomes, which are eventually degraded and cleared. However, a variety of zoonotic pathogens can interfere with the protein ubiquitination pathway and autophagy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsToxoplasma gondii Research Studies · Autophagy in Disease and Therapy · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology
