Latest Ubiquitin Research

Explore groundbreaking studies, reviews, and discoveries in ubiquitination pathways

Research Articles

When the Brain's Cleanup Crew Fails: The Protein Problem in Parkinson's Disease

Understanding how protein quality control systems fail in Parkinson's disease and the latest research on therapeutic approaches.

Eli Rivera
Oct 28, 2025

The Cell's Symphony: How WWP2 Protein Keeps Cell Division in Tune

Discover how WWP2 protein acts as a molecular conductor regulating normal cell cycle progression and what happens when this crucial regulator fails.

Ellie Ward
Oct 24, 2025

Tau Protein: The Inside Story of Alzheimer's Disease

Explore how tau protein transforms from a vital cellular component to a destructive force in Alzheimer's disease, and discover the latest treatments targeting tau pathology.

Michael Long
Oct 19, 2025

The Secret Helper: How a Tiny Protein Supercharges Biotechnology

Discover how the SUMO fusion system revolutionizes protein production and purification in biotechnology, from cellular function to laboratory applications.

Jackson Simmons
Oct 14, 2025

The Genome's Guardian: How a Protein in Yeast Could Revolutionize Cellular Biology

Discover how STUbL proteins in yeast safeguard DNA integrity and the surprising discoveries about Slx8 protein that could reshape cellular biology.

Charlotte Hughes
Oct 13, 2025

The KLHL Family: The Cellular Cleanup Crew Gone Rogue in Cancer

How tiny protein regulators in our cells hold the key to new cancer treatments. Explore the role of KLHL proteins in cancer development and progression.

Liam Carter
Oct 09, 2025

The RING1 Enigma: How a Single Protein Holds Clues to Spinal Cord Repair

Discover how RING1 protein's spatiotemporal patterns after spinal cord injury reveal new pathways for potential treatments and neural regeneration.

Carter Jenkins
Oct 09, 2025

The Protein Puzzle: Unlocking Huntington's Disease with a Molecular Key

How a clever trick with a SUMO tag is helping scientists see the true culprit behind Huntington's disease by generating native, untagged huntingtin exon1 monomers and fibrils.

Elijah Foster
Aug 23, 2025

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