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The Ubiquitin System: Functional Complexity and Semiosis joined together.

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This is a very complex subject, so as usual I will try to stick to the essentials to make things as clear as possible, while details can be dealt with in the discussion.

It is difficult to define exactly the role of the Ubiquitin System. It is usually considered mainly a pathway which regulates protein degradation, but in reality its functions are much wider than that.

In essence, the US is a complex biological system which targets many different types of proteins for different final fates.

The most common “fate” is degradation of the protein. In that sense, the Ubiquitin System works together with another extremely complex cellular system, the proteasome. In brief, the Ubiquitin System “marks” proteins for degradation, and the proteasome degrades them.

It seems simple. It is not.

Ubiquitination is essentially one of many Post-Translational modifications (PTMs): modifications of proteins after their synthesis by the ribosome (translation). But, while most PTMs use simpler biochemical groups that are usually added to the target protein (for example, acetylation), in ubiquitination a whole protein (ubiquitin) is used as a modifier of the target protein.

 

The tool: Ubiquitin

Ubiquitin is a small protein (76 AAs). Its name derives from the simple fact that it  is found in most tissues of eukaryotic organisms.

Here is its aminoacid sequence:

MQIFVKTLTGKTITLEVEPSDTIENVKAKIQDKEGIPPD

QQRLIFAGKQLEDGRTLSDYNIQKESTLHLVLRLRGG

Essentially, it has two important properties:

  1. As said, it is ubiquitous in eukaryotes
  2. It is also extremely conserved in eukaryotes

In mammals, ubiquitin is not present as a single gene. It is encoded by 4 different genes: UBB, a poliubiquitin (3 Ub sequences); UBC, a poliubiquitin (9 Ub sequences); UBA52, a mixed gene (1   Ub sequence + the ribosomal protein L40); and RPS27A, again a mixed gene (1 Ub sequence + the ribosomal protein S27A). However, the basic ubiquitin sequence is always the same in all those genes.

Its conservation is one of the highest in eukaryotes. The human sequence shows, in single celled eukaryotes:

Naegleria: 96% conservation;  Alveolata: 100% conservation;  Cellular slime molds: 99% conservation; Green algae: 100% conservation; Fungi: best hit 100% conservation (96% in yeast).

Ubiquitin and Ubiquitin like proteins (see later) are characterized by a special fold, called  β-grasp fold.

 

The semiosis: the ubiquitin code

The title of this OP makes explicit reference to semiosis. Let’s try to see why.

The simplest way to say it is: ubiquitin is a tag. The addition of ubiquitin to a substrate protein marks that protein for specific fates, the most common being degradation by the proteasome.

But not only that. See, for example, the following review:

Nonproteolytic Functions of Ubiquitin in Cell Signaling

Abstract:

The small protein ubiquitin is a central regulator of a cell’s life and death. Ubiquitin is best known for targeting protein destruction by the 26S proteasome. In the past few years, however, nonproteolytic functions of ubiquitin have been uncovered at a rapid pace. These functions include membrane trafficking, protein kinase activation, DNA repair, and chromatin dynamics. A common mechanism underlying these functions is that ubiquitin, or polyubiquitin chains, serves as a signal to recruit proteins harboring ubiquitin-binding domains, thereby bringing together ubiquitinated proteins and ubiquitin receptors to execute specific biological functions. Recent advances in understanding ubiquitination in protein kinase activation and DNA repair are discussed to illustrate the nonproteolytic functions of ubiquitin in cell signaling.

Another important aspect is that ubiquitin is not one tag, but rather a collection of different tags. IOWs, a tag based code.

See, for example, here:

The Ubiquitin Code in the Ubiquitin-Proteasome System and Autophagy

(Paywall).

Abstract:

The conjugation of the 76 amino acid protein ubiquitin to other proteins can alter the metabolic stability or non-proteolytic functions of the substrate. Once attached to a substrate (monoubiquitination), ubiquitin can itself be ubiquitinated on any of its seven lysine (Lys) residues or its N-terminal methionine (Met1). A single ubiquitin polymer may contain mixed linkages and/or two or more branches. In addition, ubiquitin can be conjugated with ubiquitin-like modifiers such as SUMO or small molecules such as phosphate. The diverse ways to assemble ubiquitin chains provide countless means to modulate biological processes. We overview here the complexity of the ubiquitin code, with an emphasis on the emerging role of linkage-specific degradation signals (degrons) in the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) and the autophagy-lysosome system (hereafter autophagy).

A good review of the basics of the ubiquitin code can be found here:

The Ubiquitin Code 

(Paywall)

It is particularly relevant, from an ID point of view, to quote the starting paragraph of that paper:

When in 1532 Spanish conquistadores set foot on the Inca Empire, they found a highly organized society that did not utilize a system of writing. Instead, the Incas recorded tax payments or mythology with quipus, devices in which pieces of thread were connected through specific knots. Although the quipus have not been fully deciphered, it is thought that the knots between threads encode most of the quipus’ content. Intriguingly, cells use a regulatory mechanism—ubiquitylation—that is reminiscent of quipus: During this reaction, proteins are modified with polymeric chains in which the linkage between ubiquitin molecules encodes information about the substrate’s fate in the cell.

Now, ubiquitin is usually linked to the target protein in chains. The first ubiquitin molecule is covalently bound through its C-terminal carboxylate group to a particular lysine, cysteine, serine, threonine or N-terminus of the target protein.

Then, additional ubiquitins are added to form a chain, and the C-terminus of the new ubiquitin is linked to one of seven lysine residues or the first methionine residue on the previously added ubiquitin.

IOWs, each ubiquitin molecule has seven lysine residues:

K6, K11, K27, K29, K33, K48, K63

And one N terminal methionine residue:

M1

And a new ubiquitin molecule can be added at each of those 8 sites in the previous ubiquitin molecule. IOWs, those 8 sites in the molecule are configurable switches that can be used to build ubiquitin chains.

Her are the 8 sites, in red, in the ubiquitin molecule:

MQIFVKTLTGKTITLEVEPSDTIENVKAKIQDKEGIPPD

QQRLIFAGKQLEDGRTLSDYNIQKESTLHLVLRLRGG

Fig 1 shows two ubiquitin molecules joined at K48.

Fig 1 A cartoon representation of a lysine 48-linked diubiquitin molecule. The two ubiquitin chains are shown as green cartoons with each chain labelled. The components of the linkage are indicated and shown as orange sticks. By Rogerdodd (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

The simplest type of chain is homogeneous (IOWs, ubiquitins are linked always at the same site). But many types of mixed and branched chains can also be found.

Let’s start with the most common situation: a poli-ubiquitination of (at least) 4 ubiqutins, linearly linked at K48. This is the common signal for proteasome degradation.

By the way, the 26S proteasome is another molecular machine of incredible complexity, made of more than 30 different proteins. However, its structure and function are not the object of this OP, and therefore I will not deal with them here.

The ubiquitin code is not completely understood, at present, but a few aspects have been well elucidated. Table 1 sums up the most important and well known modes:

Code

Meaning

Polyubiquitination (4 or more) with links at K48 or at K11 Proteasomal degradation
Monoubiqutination (single or multiple) Protein interactions, membrane trafficking, endocytosis
Polyubiquitination with links at K63 Endocytic trafficking, inflammation, translation, DNA repair.
Polyubiquitination with links at K63 (other links) Autophagic degradation of protein substrates
Polyubiquitination with links at K27, K29, K33 Non proteolytic processes
Rarer chain types (K6, K11) Under investigation

 

However, this is only a very partial approach. A recent bioinformatics paper:

An Interaction Landscape of Ubiquitin Signaling

(Paywall)

Has attempted for the first time a systematic approach to deciphering the whole code, using synthetic diubiquitins (all 8 possible variants) to identify the different interactors with those signals, and they identified, with two different methodologies,  111 and 53 selective interactors for linear polyUb chains, respectively. 46 of those interactors were identified by both methodologies.

The translation

But what “translates” the complex ubiquitin code, allowing ubiquinated proteins to met the right specific destiny? Again, we can refer to the diubiquitin paper quoted above.

How do cells decode this ubiquitin code into proper cellular responses? Recent studies have indicated that members of a protein family, ubiquitin-binding proteins (UBPs), mediate the recognition of ubiquitinated substrates. UBPs contain at least one of 20 ubiquitin-binding domains (UBDs) functioning as a signal adaptor to transmit the signal from ubiquitinated substrates to downstream effectors

But what are those “interactors” identified by the paper (at least 46 of them)? They are, indeed, complex proteins which recognize specific configurations of the “tag” (the ubiquitin chain), and link the tagged (ubiquinated) protein to other effector proteins which implement its final fate, or anyway contribute in deffrent forms to that final outcome.

 

The basic control of the procedure: the complexity of the ubiquitination process.

So, we have seen that ubiquitin chains work as tags, and that their coded signals are translated by specific interactors, so that the target protein may be linked to its final destiny, or contribute to the desired outcome. But we must still address one question: how is the ubiquitination of the different target proteins implemented? IOWs, what is the procedure that “writes” the specific codes associated to specific target proteins?

This is indeed the first step in the whole process. But it is also the most complex, and that’s why I have left it for the final part of the discussion.

Indeed, the ubiquitination process needs to realize the following aims:

  1. Identify the specific protein to be ubiquitinated
  2. Recognize the specific context in which that protein needs to be ubiquitinated
  3. Mark the target protein with the correct tag for the required fate or outcome

We have already seen that the ubiquitin system is involved in practically all different cellular paths and activities, and therefore we can expect that the implementation of the above functions must be a very complex thing.

And it is.

Now, we can certainly imagine that there are many different layers of regulation that may contribute to the general control of the procedure, specifically epigenetic levels, which are at present poorly understood. But there is one level that we can more easily explore and understand, and it is , as usual, the functional complexity of the proteins involved.

And, even at a first gross analysis, it is really easy to see that the functional complexity implied by this process is mind blowing.

Why? It is more than enough to consider the huge number of different proteins involved. Let’s see.

The ubiquitination process is well studied. It can be divided into three phases, each of which is implemented by a different kind of protein. The three steps, and the three kinds of proteins that implement them, take the name of E1, E2 and E3.

 

Fig. 2 Schematic diagram of the ubiquitylation system. Created by Roger B. Dodd: Rogerdodd at the English language Wikipedia [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)], via Wikimedia Commons

 The E1 step of ubiquitination.

This is the first thing that happens, and it is also the simplest.

E1 is the process of activation of ubiquitin, and the E1 proteins is called E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme. To put it simply, this enzyme “activates” the ubiquitin molecule in an ATP dependent process, preparing it for the following phases and attaching it to its active site cysteine residue. It is not really so simple, but for our purposes that can be enough.

This is a rather straightforward enzymatic reaction. In humans there are essentially two forms of E1 enzymes, UBA1 and UBA6, each of them about 1000 AAs long, and partially related at sequence level (42%).

 

The E2 step of ubiquitination.

The second step is ubiquitin conjugation. The activated ubiquitin is transferred from the E1 enzyme to the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, or E2 enzyme, where it is attached to a cysteine residue.

This apparently simple “transfer” is indeed a complex intermediate phase. Humans have about 40 different E2 molecules. The following paper:

E2 enzymes: more than just middle men

details some of the functional complexity existing at this level.

Abstract:

Ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes (E2s) are the central players in the trio of enzymes responsible for the attachment of ubiquitin (Ub) to cellular proteins. Humans have ∼40 E2s that are involved in the transfer of Ub or Ub-like (Ubl) proteins (e.g., SUMO and NEDD8). Although the majority of E2s are only twice the size of Ub, this remarkable family of enzymes performs a variety of functional roles. In this review, we summarize common functional and structural features that define unifying themes among E2s and highlight emerging concepts in the mechanism and regulation of E2s.

However, I will not go into details about these aspects, because we have better things to do: we still have to discuss the E3 phase!

 

The E3 step of ubiquitination.

This is the last phase of ubiquitination, where the ubiquitin tag is finally transferred to the target protein, as initial mono-ubiquitination, or to build an ubiquitin chain by following ubiqutination events. The proteins which implement this final passage are call E3 ubiquitin ligases. Here is the definition from Wikipedia:

A ubiquitin ligase (also called an E3 ubiquitin ligase) is a protein that recruits an E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme that has been loaded with ubiquitin, recognizes a protein substrate, and assists or directly catalyzes the transfer of ubiquitin from the E2 to the protein substrate.

It is rather obvious that the role of the E3 protein is very important and delicate. Indeed it:

  1. Recognizes and links the E2-ubiquitin complex
  2. Recognizes and links some specific target protein
  3. Builds the appropriate tag for that protein (Monoubiquitination, mulptiple monoubiquitination, or poliubiquitination with the appropriate type of ubiquitin chain).
  4. And it does all those things at the right moment, in the right context, and for the right protein.

IOWs, the E3 protein writes the coded tag. It is, by all means, the central actor in our complex story.

So, here comes the really important point: how many different E3 ubiquitin ligases do we find in eukaryotic organisms? And the simple answer is: quite a lot!

Humans are supposed to have more than 600 different E3 ubiquitin ligases!

So, the human machinery for ubiquitination is about:

2 E1 proteins  –  40 E2 proteins – >600 E3 proteins

A real cascade of complexity!

OK, but even if we look at single celled eukaryotes we can already find an amazing level of complexity. In yeast, for example, we have:

1 or 2 E1 proteins  –  11 E2 proteins – 60-100 E3 proteins

See here:

The Ubiquitin–Proteasome System of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Now, a very important point. Those 600+ E3 proteins that we find in humans are really different proteins. Of course, they have something in common: a specific domain.

From that point of view, they can be roughly classified in three groups according to the specific E3 domain:

  1. RING group: the RING finger domain ((Really Interesting New Gene) is a short domain of zinc finger type, usually 40 to 60 amino acids. This is the biggest group of E3s (about 600)
  2. HECT domain (homologous to the E6AP carboxyl terminus): this is a bigger domain (about 350 AAs). Located at the C terminus of the protein. It has a specific ligase activity, different from the RING   In humans we have approximately 30 proteins of this type.
  3. RBR domain (ring between ring fingers): this is a common domain (about 150 AAs) where two RING fingers are separated by a region called IBR, a cysteine-rich zinc finger. Only a subset of these proteins are E3 ligases, in humans we have about 12 of them.

See also here.

OK, so these proteins have one of these three domains in common, usually the RING domain. The function of the domain is specifically to interact with the E2-ubiquitin complex to implement the ligase activity. But the domain is only a part of the molecule, indeed a small part of it. E3 ligases are usually big proteins (hundreds, and up to thousands of AAs). Each of these proteins has a very specific non domain sequence, which is probably responsible for the most important part of the function: the recognition of the specific proteins that each E3 ligase processes.

This is a huge complexity, in terms of functional information at sequence level.

Our map of the ubiquinating system in humans could now be summarized as follows:

2 E1 proteins  –  40 E2 proteins – 600+ E3 proteins + thousands of specific substrates

IOWs, each of hundreds of different complex proteins recognizes its specific substrates, and marks them with a shared symbolic code based on uniquitin and its many possible chains. And the result of that process is that proteins are destined to degradation by the proteasome or other mechanisms, and that protein interactions and protein signaling are regulated and made possible, and that practically all cellular functions are allowed to flow correctly and smoothly.

Finally, here are two further compoments of the ubuquitination system, which I will barely mention, to avoid making this OP too long.

Ubiquitin like proteins (Ubl):

A number of ubiquitin like proteins add to the complexity of the system. Here is the abstract from a review:

The eukaryotic ubiquitin family encompasses nearly 20 proteins that are involved in the posttranslational modification of various macromolecules. The ubiquitin-like proteins (UBLs) that are part of this family adopt the β-grasp fold that is characteristic of its founding member ubiquitin (Ub). Although structurally related, UBLs regulate a strikingly diverse set of cellular processes, including nuclear transport, proteolysis, translation, autophagy, and antiviral pathways. New UBL substrates continue to be identified and further expand the functional diversity of UBL pathways in cellular homeostasis and physiology. Here, we review recent findings on such novel substrates, mechanisms, and functions of UBLs.

These proteins include SUMO, Nedd8, ISB15, and many others.

Deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs):

The process of ubiquitination, complex as it already is, is additionally regulated by these enzymes which can cleave ubiquitin from proteins and other molecules. Doing so, they can reverse the effects of ubiquitination, creating a delicately balanced regulatory network. In humans there are nearly 100 DUB genes, which can be classified into two main classes: cysteine proteases and metalloproteases.

 

By the way, here is a beautiful animation of the basic working of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in degrading damaged proteins:

 

 

A summary:

So, let’s try a final graphic summary of the whole ubiquitin system in humans:

Fig 3 A graphic summary of the Ubiquitin System

 

Evolution of the Ubiquitin system?

The Ubiqutin system is essentially an eukaryotic tool. Of course, distant precursors for some of the main components have been “found” in prokaryotes. Here is the abstract from a paper that sums up what is known about the prokaryotic “origins” of the system:

Structure and evolution of ubiquitin and ubiquitin-related domains.

(Paywall)

Abstract:

Since its discovery over three decades ago, it has become abundantly clear that the ubiquitin (Ub) system is a quintessential feature of all aspects of eukaryotic biology. At the heart of the system lies the conjugation and deconjugation of Ub and Ub-like (Ubls) proteins to proteins or lipids drastically altering the biochemistry of the targeted molecules. In particular, it represents the primary mechanism by which protein stability is regulated in eukaryotes. Ub/Ubls are typified by the β-grasp fold (β-GF) that has additionally been recruited for a strikingly diverse range of biochemical functions. These include catalytic roles (e.g., NUDIX phosphohydrolases), scaffolding of iron-sulfur clusters, binding of RNA and other biomolecules such as co-factors, sulfur transfer in biosynthesis of diverse metabolites, and as mediators of key protein-protein interactions in practically every conceivable cellular context. In this chapter, we present a synthetic overview of the structure, evolution, and natural classification of Ub, Ubls, and other members of the β-GF. The β-GF appears to have differentiated into at least seven clades by the time of the last universal common ancestor of all extant organisms, encompassing much of the structural diversity observed in extant versions. The β-GF appears to have first emerged in the context of translation-related RNA-interactions and subsequently exploded to occupy various functional niches. Most biochemical diversification of the fold occurred in prokaryotes, with the eukaryotic phase of its evolution mainly marked by the expansion of the Ubl clade of the β-GF. Consequently, at least 70 distinct Ubl families are distributed across eukaryotes, of which nearly 20 families were already present in the eukaryotic common ancestor. These included multiple protein and one lipid conjugated forms and versions that functions as adapter domains in multimodule polypeptides. The early diversification of the Ubl families in eukaryotes played a major role in the emergence of characteristic eukaryotic cellular substructures and systems pertaining to nucleo-cytoplasmic compartmentalization, vesicular trafficking, lysosomal targeting, protein processing in the endoplasmic reticulum, and chromatin dynamics. Recent results from comparative genomics indicate that precursors of the eukaryotic Ub-system were already present in prokaryotes. The most basic versions are those combining an Ubl and an E1-like enzyme involved in metabolic pathways related to metallopterin, thiamine, cysteine, siderophore and perhaps modified base biosynthesis. Some of these versions also appear to have given rise to simple protein-tagging systems such as Sampylation in archaea and Urmylation in eukaryotes. However, other prokaryotic systems with Ubls of the YukD and other families, including one very close to Ub itself, developed additional elements that more closely resemble the eukaryotic state in possessing an E2, a RING-type E3, or both of these components. Additionally, prokaryotes have evolved conjugation systems that are independent of Ub ligases, such as the Pup system.

 

As usual, we are dealing here with distant similarities, but there is no doubt that the ubiquitin system as we know it appears in eukaryotes.

But what about its evolutionary history in eukaryotes?

We have already mentioned the extremely high conservation of ubiquitin itself.

UBA1, the main E1 enzyme, is rather well conserved from fungi to humans: 60% identity, 1282 bits, 1.21 bits per aminoacid (baa).

E2s are small enzymes, extremely conserved from fungi to humans: 86% identity, for example, for UB2D2, a 147 AAs molecule.

E3s, of course, are the most interesting issue. This big family of proteins behaves in different ways, consistently with its highly specific functions.

It is difficult to build a complete list of E3 proteins. I have downloaded from Uniprot a list of reviewed human proteins including “E3 ubiquitun ligase” in their name: a total of 223 proteins.

The mean evolutionary behavior of this group in metazoa is rather different from protein to protein. However, as a group these proteins exhibit an information jump in vertebrates which is significantly higher than the jump in all other proteins:

 

Fig. 4 Boxplots of the distribution of human conserved information jump from pre-vertebrates to vertebrates in 223 E3 ligase proteins and in all other human proteins. The difference is highly significant.

 

As we already know, this is evidence that this class of proteins is highly engineered in the transition to vertebrates. That is consistent with the need to finely regulate many cellular processes, most of which are certainly highly specific for different groups of organisms.

The highest vertebrate jump, in terms of bits per aminoacid, is shown in my group by the E3 ligase TRIM62. also known as DEAR1 (Q9BVG3), a 475 AAs long protein almost absent in pre-vertebrates (best hit 129 bits, 0.27 baa in Branchiostoma belcheri) and which flaunts an amazing jump of 1.433684 baa in cartilaginous fish (810 bits, 1.705263 baa).

But what is this protein? It is a master regulator tumor suppressor gene, implied in immunity, inflammation, tumor genesis.

See here:

TRIM Protein-Mediated Regulation of Inflammatory and Innate Immune Signaling and Its Association with Antiretroviral Activity

and here:

DEAR1 is a Chromosome 1p35 Tumor Suppressor and Master Regulator of TGFβ-Driven Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition

This is just to show what a single E3 ligase can be involved in!

An opposite example, from the point of view of evolutionary history, is SIAH1, an E3 ligase implied in proteosomal degradation of proteins. It is a 282 AAs long protein, which already exhibits 1.787234 baa (504 bits) of homology in deuterostomes, indeed already 1.719858 baa in cnidaria. However, in fungi the best hit is only 50.8 bits (0.18 baa). So, this is a protein whose engineering takes place at the start of metazoa, and which exhibits only a minor further jump in vertebrates (0.29 baa), which brings the protein practically to its human form already in cartilaginous fish (280 identities out of 282, 99%). Practically a record.

So, we can see that E3 ligases are a good example of a class of proteins which perform different specific functions, and therefore exhibit different evolutionary histories: some, like TRIM62, are vertebrate quasi-novelties, others, like SIAH1, are metazoan quasi-novelties. And, of course, there are other behaviours, like for example BRCA1, Breast cancer type 1 susceptibility protein, a protein 1863 AAs long which only in mammals acquires part of its final sequence configuration in humans.

The following figure shows the evolutionary history of the three proteins mentioned above.

 

Fig. 5 Evolutionary history in metazoa of three E3 ligases (human conserved functional information)

 

An interesting example: NF-kB signaling

I will discuss briefly an example of how the Ubiquitin system interacts with some specific and complex final effector system. One of the best models for that is the NF-kB signaling.

NK-kB is a transcription factor family that is the final effector of a complex signaling pathway. I will rely mainly on the following recent free paper:

The Ubiquitination of NF-κB Subunits in the Control of Transcription

Here is the abstract:

Nuclear factor (NF)-κB has evolved as a latent, inducible family of transcription factors fundamental in the control of the inflammatory response. The transcription of hundreds of genes involved in inflammation and immune homeostasis require NF-κB, necessitating the need for its strict control. The inducible ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of the cytoplasmic inhibitor of κB (IκB) proteins promotes the nuclear translocation and transcriptional activity of NF-κB. More recently, an additional role for ubiquitination in the regulation of NF-κB activity has been identified. In this case, the ubiquitination and degradation of the NF-κB subunits themselves plays a critical role in the termination of NF-κB activity and the associated transcriptional response. While there is still much to discover, a number of NF-κB ubiquitin ligases and deubiquitinases have now been identified which coordinate to regulate the NF-κB transcriptional response. This review will focus the regulation of NF-κB subunits by ubiquitination, the key regulatory components and their impact on NF-κB directed transcription.

 

The following figure sums up the main features of the canonical activation pathway:

 

Fig. 6 A simple summary of the main steps in the canonical activayion pathway of NF-kB

 

Here the NF-κB TF is essentially the heterodimer RelA – p50. Before activation, the NF-κB (RelA – p50) dimer is kept in an inactive state and remains in the cytoplasm because it is linked to the IkB alpha protein, an inhibitor of its function.

Activation is mediated by a signal-receptor interaction, which starts the whole pathway. A lot of different signals can do that, adding to the complexity, but we will not discuss this part here.

As a consequence of receptor activation, another protein complex, IκB kinase (IKK), accomplishes the Phosphorylation of IκBα at serines 32 and 36. This is the signal for the ubiquitination of the IkB alpha inhibitor.

This ubiqutination targets IkB alpha for proteosomal degradation. But how is it achieved?

Well, things are not so simple. A whole protein complex is necessary, a complex which implements many different ubiquitinations in different contexts, including this one.

The complex is made by 3 basic proteins:

  • Cul1 (a scaffold protein, 776 AAs)
  • SKP1 (an adaptor protein, 163 AAs)
  • Rbx1 (a RING finger protein with E3 ligase activity, 108 AAs)

Plus:

  • An F-box protein (FBP) which changes in the different context, and confers specificity.

In our context, the F box protein is called beta TRC (605 AAs).

 

Fig. 7 A simple diagram of the SKP1 – beta TRC complex

 

Once the IkB alpha inhibitor is ubiquinated and degraded in the proteasome, the NF-κB dimer is free to translocate to the nucleus, and implement its function as a transcription factor (which is another complex issue, that we will not discuss).

OK, this is only the canonical activation of the pathway.

In the non canonical pathway (not shown in the figure) a different set of signals, receptors and activators acts on a different NF-κB dimer (RelB – p100). This dimer is not linked to any inhibitor, but is itself inactive in the cytoplasm. As a result of the signal, p100 is phosphorylated at serines 866 and 870. Again, this is the signal for ubiquitination.

This ubiquitination is performed by the same complex described above, but the result is different. P100 is only partially degraded in the proteasome, and is transformed into a smaller protein, p52, which remains linked to RelB. The RelB – p52 dimer is now an active NF-κB Transcription Factor, and it can relocate to the nucleus and act there.

But that’s not all.

  • You may remember that RelA (also called p 65) is one of the two components of NF-kB TF in the canonical pathway (the other being p 50). Well, RelA is heavily controlled by ubiquitination after it binds DNA in the nucleus to implement its TF activity. Ubiquitination (a very complex form of it) helps detachment of the TF from DNA, and its controlled degradation, avoiding sustained expression of NF-κB-dependent genes. For more details, see section 4 in the above quoted paper: “Ubiquitination of NF-κB”.
  • The activation of IKK in both the canonical and non canonical pathway after signal – receptor interaction is not so simple as depicted in Fig. 6. For more details, look at Fig. 1 in this paper: Ubiquitin Signaling in the NF-κB Pathway. You can see that, in the canonical pathway, the activation of IKK is mediated by many proteins, including TRAF2, TRAF6, TAK1, NEMO.
  • TRAF2 is a key regulator on many signaling pathways, including NF-kB. It is an E3 ubiquitin ligase. From Uniprot:  “Has E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase activity and promotes ‘Lys-63’-linked ubiquitination of target proteins, such as BIRC3, RIPK1 and TICAM1. Is an essential constituent of several E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase complexes, where it promotes the ubiquitination of target proteins by bringing them into contact with other E3 ubiquitin ligases.”
  • The same is true of TRAF6.
  • NEMO (NF-kappa-B essential modulator ) is also a key regulator. It is not an ubiquinating enzyme, but it is rather heavily regulated by ubiquitination. From Uniprot: “Regulatory subunit of the IKK core complex which phosphorylates inhibitors of NF-kappa-B thus leading to the dissociation of the inhibitor/NF-kappa-B complex and ultimately the degradation of the inhibitor. Its binding to scaffolding polyubiquitin seems to play a role in IKK activation by multiple signaling receptor pathways. However, the specific type of polyubiquitin recognized upon cell stimulation (either ‘Lys-63’-linked or linear polyubiquitin) and its functional importance is reported conflictingly.”
  • In the non canonical pathway, the activation of IKK alpha after signal – receptor interaction is mediated by other proteins, in particular one protein called NIK (see again Fig. 1 quoted above). Well, NIK is regulated by two different types of E3 ligases, with two different types of polyubiquitination:
    • cIAP E3 ligase inactivates it by constant degradation using a K48 chain
    • ZFP91 E3 ligase stabilizes it using a K63 chain

See here:

Non-canonical NF-κB signaling pathway.

In particular, Fig. 3

These are only some of the ways the ubiquitin system interacts with the very complex NF-kB signaling system. I hope that’s enough to show how two completely different and complex biological systems manage to cooperate by intricate multiple connections, and how the ubiquitin system can intervene at all levels of another process. What is true for the NF-kB signaling pathway is equally true for a lot of other biological systems, indeed for almost all basic cellular processes.

But this OP is already too long, and I have to stop here.

As usual, I want to close with a brief summary of the main points:

  1. The Ubiquitin system is a very important regulation network that shows two different signatures of design: amazing complexity and an articulated semiotic structure.
  2. The complexity is obvious at all levels of the network, but is especially amazing at the level of the hundreds of E3 ligases, that can recognize thousands of different substrates in different contexts.
  3. The semiosis is obvious in the Ubiquitin Code, a symbolic code of different ubiquitin configurations which serve as specific “tags” that point to different outcomes.
  4. The code is universally implemented and shared in eukaryotes, and allows control on almost all most important cellular processes.
  5. The code is written by the hundreds of E3 ligases. It is read by the many interactors with ubiquitin-binding domains (UBDs).
  6. The final outcome is of different types, including degradation, endocytosis, protein signaling, and so on.
  7. The interaction of the Ubiquitin System with other complex cellular pathways, like signaling pathways, is extremely complex and various, and happens at many different levels and by many different interacting proteins for each single pathway.

PS:

Thanks to DATCG for pointing to this video in three parts by Dr. Raymond Deshaies, was Professor of Biology at the California Institute of Technology and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. On iBiology Youtube page:

A primer on the ubiquitin-proteasome system

 

Cullin-RING ubiquitin ligases: structure, structure, mechanism, and regulation

 

Targeting the ubiquitin-proteasome system in cancer

Comments
GPuccio @502 "I would really want that someone from the other side had the courage of addressing the real arguments. Someone who had the clarity of saying: no, you are wrong because our theory can explain the things that you describe and analyze, and I will show you the reasons why." Yes, indeed. If they believe that they are right, why do they not address the arguments? And if they sense that they cannot address the arguments, how can they believe they are right?Origenes
March 23, 2018
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ET, Mung: Frankly, I am tired of those repeated pseudo-philosophical arguments from people who don't even understand the basics of philosophy of science. I would really want that someone from the other side had the courage of addressing the real arguments. Someone who had the clarity of saying: no, you are wrong because our theory can explain the things that you describe and analyze, and I will show you the reasons why. Instead of people who just say that molecular biology is not their specialty. And then go on defending a theory which can be easily falsified by molecular biology. Instead of people who just repeat that even if we presented the best arguments in the world to show that only design can explain facts, they would still reject design as a god-of-the-gaps argument. God-of-the gaps: what an argument, indeed! If there is anything that they can't explain, and that design can explain, that's a god-of-the-gaps argument, not a scientific reason to prefer the only available explanation. Or, better still: an argument from incredulity! As if being incredulous in front of things that cannot be believed is a crime. I would really like to fight. But how can you fight with people who never address the real issues? Do they admit that RV + NS can never explain the 1.7 million bits of functional information that appear at the vertebrate transition? No. But do they try to explain that simple fact? Or to deny it? No. Because molecular biology is not their specialty. Do they admit that a semiotic system like the ubiquitin system, which controls and regulates the most different cell processes, is a huge problem for their theories? No. But do they try to explain why? No. Not even a word. So, god-of-the-gaps. And the usual elementary school bullying, camouflaged as smart sarcasm. And the usual "group dogma", camouflaged as skepticism. I love intellectual discussion, even intellectual fight. But I am afraid that the "intellectual" thing has been completely lost in this debate. OK, I apologize for the harsh tone of this post. But when it's necessary, it's necessary.gpuccio
March 23, 2018
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It's the "I don't have an argument" of the gaps argument.Mung
March 23, 2018
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Science is foreign to the TSZ ilk. Forensic science must be a "criminal of the gaps" argument. Archaeology offers an "artisan of the gaps/ intentional agency of the gaps" argument. They call ID an argument from ignorance and yet the ignorance is all theirs. What is their justification for saying blind and mindless processes do it? The design inference is based on our knowledge of cause and effect relationships. Evolutionism is based on ignorance.ET
March 23, 2018
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Oh my, now they are having issues with ID's falsification criteria because it forces them to do some actual work! Science really isn't their cup of anything.ET
March 23, 2018
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Mung at #496: Very good question! OK, here is how I see things. a) Semiosis is an independent indicator of design, because it is a formal feature which, for its same nature, is incompatible with any non design interpretation. That's because no system which cannot have any understanding of the siubjective experience of meaning can really generate a symbolic code. However, even codes have different levels of complexity, and in that sense, the more complex a code is, the stronger is its power as an indicator of design. So, let's say that semiosis has a double aspect, as an indicator of design: a1) A formal aspect, that is the presence of a symbolic code, which is common to all semiotic systems. a2) A quantitative aspect, that is the functional complexity linked to the implementation of the code (which is a specific subset of functional complexity), which can differ from a semiotic system to another. So, all symbolic codes are indicators of design, but the higher their specific functional complexity, the better. b) Functional complexity and Irreducible complexity are more connected, and independent from semiosis. A protein can be (and usually is) functionally complex even if its function is not symbolic. The relationship between functional complexity and irreducible complexity is more subtle. Let's say that functional complexity referes usually to individual functional units, while irreducible complexity refers to some set of functional units, each of them functionally complex, which irreducibly sooperate to implement a function. So, let's say that a specifi set of E1-E2-E3 enzymes contributes to ubiquinate some specific target protein. Each of the three enzymes has a "local" function in relation to the ubiquitination process, and a functional complexity which can be measure in relation to that local function. However, the individula local functions are useless if the whole process is not there, because the treu utility of the process is the final ubiquitination of the target protein. And of course we can add the specific deubiquitinating enzyme which contributes to ensure the correct regulation of the target protein, and other possible factors involved (phosphorylation processes, and so on). The simple truth is that if any of those component is lacking, the regulation of the target protein is no more a regulation. So, the regulation of the target protein is the true function which is useful (and therefore could be in principle the object of NS). So, let's say that we have the functional complexitiesof the following proteins in relation to their local function (these are just fictional numbers): E1 580 bits E2 600 bits E3 950 bits DUB 730 bits The functional complexity of the whole system, if it is irreducibly complex, will be the product of those complexitis (that is the sum of the bit values). In this case, 2360 bits (if I am not wrong). That is a lot more of the individual functional complexities, because these are exponential values. Of course, some component can be shared between different systems. In the case of ubiquitin, for example, the E1 component is almost always the same. But we have seens that the E2 and E3 components provide great specificity, and can be rather unique for each system, or for a small subset of systems. So, irreducible complexity is a property which enhances exponentially the functional complexity of the individual components. Of course, the presence at the same time of all three features: a) High functional complexity of many individual proteins which b) form an irreducibly complex system which c) works at least in part by a semiotic code certainly adds greatly to the final design inference. That's why the ubiquitin system is such a treasure for ID! :)gpuccio
March 23, 2018
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Mung at #494 and 495: You are a powerful opponent. I cannot try any active defense against you! :)gpuccio
March 23, 2018
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This is only slightly off-topic so I hope you will forgive me. Do you see a) Functional complexity, b) Semiosis, and c) Irreducible complexity as being independent indicators of design such that when all found together they make a stronger cumulative case for design, or do you see them as all three always being present where design is present?Mung
March 23, 2018
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gpuccio:
No active defense. Ever.
It's because you didn't post it at TSZ. Obviously.Mung
March 23, 2018
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gpuccio @484. I see that you failed to answer at all the scientific objections I raised in my post @475. I perfectly understand if you cannot defend your silly "ID theory" and your OP. Your post doesn't intimidate me with all it's fancy words and pictures and any true scientist would just have a good laugh on reading it. Can't wait for the next one!Mung
March 23, 2018
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ET: (quoting Alan Fox at #492)
I should have said “to attack evolutionary theory effectively, you need an alternative”.
According to Popper a theory must be falsifiable to be a scientific theory. Luckily, both neo-darwinism and ID can be falsified, and therefore are scientific theories. Falsification does not need any alternative theory: it can be accomplished by demonstrating that the mechanism on which the theory is built is logically or empirically inconsistent with the facts that the theory pretends to explain. ID can be falsified by showing that non design systems can generate new original complex functional information. Of course, nobody has ever been able to show that. Neo-darwinism can be falsified by showing that RV + NS cannot empirically explain what we observe. That has been done in many ways. I have summarized those which are IMO the most valid arguments that faslify neo-darwinism in my two OPs, many times linked here: What are the limits of Natural Selection? An interesting open discussion with Gordon Davisson https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/what-are-the-limits-of-natural-selection-an-interesting-open-discussion-with-gordon-davisson/ and: What are the limits of Random Variation? A simple evaluation of the probabilistic resources of our biological world https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/what-are-the-limits-of-random-variation-a-simple-evaluation-of-the-probabilistic-resources-of-our-biological-world/ I am available to discuss in detaill all the arguments presented there. If someone wants to try an active defense of the neo-darwinian theory. Good luck. Proposing an alternative theory is not a falsification of the existing theory. Many theories can compete, if they have not been falsified, and anyone is free to decide which of them is the best explanation. Competition and falsification are two different things, if one wants to keep a correct epistemological approach.gpuccio
March 23, 2018
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Alan doubles down on his ignorance:
I should have said “to attack evolutionary theory effectively, you need an alternative”.
That is also false and in this case moot. There isn't any scientific theory of evolution to replace so no alternative is required. Also evolution by means of intelligent design is being used in genetic algorithms whereas no one uses evolution by means of blind and mindless processes for anything.ET
March 23, 2018
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DATCG: This is specially interesting to me: Cbl Ubiquitin Ligases Control B Cell Exit from the Germinal-Center Reaction http://www.cell.com/immunity/fulltext/S1074-7613(18)30082-7
Summary Selective expansion of high-affinity antigen-specific B cells in germinal centers (GCs) is a key event in antibody affinity maturation. GC B cells with improved affinity can either continue affinity-driven selection or exit the GC to differentiate into plasma cells (PCs) or memory B cells. Here we found that deleting E3 ubiquitin ligases Cbl and Cbl-b (Cbls) in GC B cells resulted in the early exit of high-affinity antigen-specific B cells from the GC reaction and thus impaired clonal expansion. Cbls were highly expressed in GC light zone (LZ) B cells, where they promoted the ubiquitination and degradation of Irf4, a transcription factor facilitating PC fate choice. Strong CD40 and BCR stimulation triggered the Cbl degradation, resulting in increased Irf4 expression and exit from GC affinity selection. Thus, a regulatory cascade that is centered on the Cbl ubiquitin ligases ensures affinity-driven clonal expansion by connecting BCR affinity signals with differentiation programs.
So, ubiquitin and E3 ligases are directly involved in important regulation nodes of the antibody affinity maturation process! :) This is fascinating, because antibody affinity maturation is the best example we have of an embedded engineering process based on bottom up strategies. I have discussed that scenario from an ID point of view here: Antibody affinity maturation as an engineering process (and other things) https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/antibody-affinity-maturation-as-an-engineering-process-and-other-things/ Good to know that ubiqutin has an important role there too! :)gpuccio
March 23, 2018
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George Castillo: "How was the p-value calculated in Figure 4?" Wilcoxon test for two independent samples. I use R for all statistical analyses.gpuccio
March 23, 2018
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This is an interesting read, as I work my way through it. How was the p-value calculated in Figure 4?George Castillo
March 22, 2018
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ET: (at #486, quoting Alan Fox) "To attack evolutionary theory, you need an alternative." This is completely false. Of course a theory can be falsified even if there is no alternative available. Science is about the best explanation, but an explanation that does not work is not an explanation at all. The epistemology of Alan Fox is strange indeed!gpuccio
March 22, 2018
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I missed this gem from Alan:
Dembski’s “explanatory filter” was a pretty diagram, entirely useless as a scientific tool.
Oh my- the EF is standard operating procedure for anyone trying to determine the cause of whatever they are investigating. It forces the user to follow Newton's four rules of scientific reasoning. It is useful as a scientific tool- that is for anyone who understands science and investigation.ET
March 22, 2018
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Alan Fox is clearly a fool or a liar. He sez that Dr Behe has been:
Debunked on the bacterial flagellum, debunked on chloroqhine resistance.
Nonsense- pure unadulterated nonsense. No one has ever refuted Dr Behe on any of his claims involving evidence for ID. Then he sez:
To attack evolutionary theory, you need an alternative.
That is just more nonsense. And there isn't any scientific theory of evolution. You don't have any testable hypotheses pertaining to blind and mindless processes. If a theory is shown to be false there doesn't need to be a replacement before you can it. So the problem is our opponents are liars who truly believe their lies and no one will ever be able to convince them otherwise. A total waste of time and spaceET
March 22, 2018
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Perhaps it's our opponents that are simple and ID and science are too difficult for them. No active defense you say? It's all settled science they say. Simple.ET
March 22, 2018
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ET, Mung: The problem is simple. We in ID know that functional complexity, semiosis and irreducible complexity are reliable markers of design. We know that empirical evidence supports that beyond any possible doubt. I have given my explicit definition of design, and there can be no possible doubt about what I mean by design in my reasonings. I have given my explicit definition of functional complexity and measured it in many contexts, with a methodology which is objective and reproducible, and that I can defend explicitly. There is a very clear definition of semiosis, and UB has written a lot about that. Behe has written clearly about Irreducible complexity. So, most of us in ID agree very well about what these concepts are. And we agree that they allow a safe design inference, if correctly applied. Now, an OP like this (ubiquitin) has not the purpose of putting all that in discussion again. It has the purpose to show a well described and clear example of a system in biology that exhibits huge amounts of: a) Functional complexity b) Semiosis c) Irreducible complexity Now, what one would expect from a commenter on the other side is some possible criticism about my arguments, IOWs some argument that shows that the ubiquitin system does not exhibit one or all of those features, according to the explicit definitions that have been given. Or, alternatively, some recognition that my arguments are correct, and that the ubiquitin system does exhibit the features that I described, but with a reminder that the basic objection remains that those features, for our opponents, do not allow a design detection. That would be a reasonable discussion, about the topic of the thread. Instead, Alan Fox, who recognizes that he did not know well the subject of ubiquitin, seems to criticize me for describing a system which was discovered by others (???), and for suggesting as a "subtext" that the system points to design. Then he and his colleagues go on dismissing the basics of ID, without any reference to the issues in this OP. OK guys, we know that you don't accept ID. No need to remind that each time. We have discussed the reasons when possible, and in the end it is clear that there are deep differences in our views about science, about philosophy of science, about scientific methodology, and so on. But really, if you cannot address the specific issues in this topic, if you cannot say if you agree or not that the ubiquitin system shows evidence of functional complexity, semiosis, and irreducible complexity, if you don't even understand what functional complexity or irreducible complexity are (I hope you understand at least what semiosis is), if even if you understood the concepts you would never accept that they are connected to design, if you go on quoting papers that have nothing to do with the issue, only because they include the words "ubiquitin" and "evolution" in their abstract, and so on and so on, then what discussion can we have? None at all. My position is different. I don't reject others'ideas out of prejudice or of vague and wrong ideas about the philosophy of science. I reject neo-darwinism for very precise reasons, and I have dedicated a lot of discussion to express those reasons, including my two recent posts about RV and NS and their limits, which are very detailed in terms of biological arguments. I don't reject neo-darwinism saying that it is a darwin-of-the-gaps theory (although it certainly is). I try to make a specific analysis of what it says, and of the reasons why what it says is wrong. But our interlocutors seem not to be interested even in that. Their discussions are always vague a priori philosophical rejections of ID, whatever its arguments may be. But, strangely, they are never a defense of their own theory: they never really defend neo-darwinism. So, if I say that RV has severe limitations, I would expect from a convinced neo-darwinism an immediate reaction: no, you are wrong! and I will show you why you are wrong. Instead, nothing. I have published a table with a very generous computation of the probabilistic resources of our biological scenarios. No reaction. Am I wrong? Am I right? That does not seem to interest neo-darwinist. At most, we can expect something of the kind: but you have not demonstrated that what we say is impossible! No active defense. Ever. I have published a whole OP where I analyze in detail the known cases of NS, and I argue very specifically about what NS cannot do. No active defense. Ever. But NS is always invoked when one shows the limitations of RV. And neutral variation is always invoked when one shows the limitations of NS. And natural selection is invoked again when one shows that neutral variation has the same limitations of RV. And so on, and so on. Selectionists become neutralists when it is convenient, and neutralists invoke selection when only that option remains. What if someone just shows the limitations of both RV and NS? No active defense. Ever. After all, their theory is a dogma, and why should one actively defend a dogma? Any falsification of the dogma is, of course, a god-of-the-gaps argument. Because who can exclude that some day, in some place, some explanation compatible with the dogma will be found? No one. After all, it is possible No active defense. Ever. Faith is more than enough, for those who proudly define themselves "skeptics".gpuccio
March 22, 2018
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And another shameless comment:
I showed you bones that exist in early bird embryos that fuse into fewer bones, over and over again.
Umm development does not = evolution. And you and yours don't have any explanation for developmental biology in the first place. Given starting populations of bacteria you don't have a mechanism capable of producing anything else besides more bacteria.ET
March 22, 2018
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No shame Alan Fox strikes back:
I don’t see much future in a discussion on ID as science. It fails the hypothesis test in not having one. First find your hypothesis, then get back to me!
That has been provided and you just hand-waved it away. And when asked to show the testable hypothesis for evolution by means of blind and mindless processes you failed to deliver. So it appears that you have a bad case of willful ignorance.
The niche has designed a resistant bacterium.
Question begging. Why couldn't it be that bacteria were designed with the ability to adapt and that is exactly what we observe?
There is no theory or hypothesis of ID that is scientific or testable. ID is not science.
Testing Intelligent Design. It's even on TSZ! And guess what? It is more than you and yours have for blind watchmaker evolution. Alan Fox strikes out, again.ET
March 22, 2018
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Glen is incapable of carrying on a discussion. All Glen wants to do in pontificate.ET
March 22, 2018
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gpuccio:
To GlenDavidson, what can I say? Some of his arguments are, again, trivial stereotypes, like those about the “limitations of mindless evolutionary processes”, and so on. The rest I really don’t understand: in particular, the supposed difference between Paley and ID, which would make him “honest”, and IDists “dishonest”.
Someone else recently posted here that Paley's argument was decidedly not by way of analogy. IF that is in fact the case then Glen's objection is horribly misguided.Mung
March 22, 2018
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gpuccio:
I really don’t think that this is worth the while.
Glen loves to get up on his soapbox and preach to the choir and then complain that there is a lack of discussion.Mung
March 22, 2018
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Allan Keith isn't here because this is a scientific evidence threadET
March 22, 2018
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Mung is channeling his inner Alan Fox...ET
March 22, 2018
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Makes you wonder why "Allan Keith" isn't participating in this thread. Probably afraid of getting banned.Mung
March 22, 2018
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The problem with ubiquitin is just that, it is ubiquitous. It's like finding out that grains of sand can fill in any number of holes and declaring you've discovered a semiotic system, therefore holes filled with sand are designed. But what about the complexity! Well, my measure is 500 grains of sand. 500 grains of functional sand complexity (FSC)is enough to infer design. This is why I just can't take ID arguments seriously. Nice try gpuccio.Mung
March 22, 2018
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The TSZ ilk are clueless. Now we have to know how it was designed and who designed it BEFORE we can infer it was designed. Those people are so anti-science they are a pathetic lot. No amount of evidence will ever convince them. That is because evidence doesn't mean anything to them. They already have their minds made up and won't change until they die. And they will never be able to support their claims. But that doesn't matter to them because evolutionism is being taught to unsuspecting kids.ET
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