[
International C. elegans Meeting,
2001]
The ubiuquitin-proteasome pathway is a key mechanism for substrate-specific degradation to control the abundance of a number of proteins. SCF complex, one of ubiquitin-protein ligases (E3s), regulates cell cycle progression, signal transduction, and many other biological systems. The SCF complex consists of invariable components, such as Skp1, Cul-1 and Rbx1, and variable components called F-box proteins that bind to Skp1 through the F-box motif. F-box proteins are substrate-specific adaptor subunits that recruit substrates to the SCF complex. Surprisingly, we found that the genome of Caenorhabditis elegans ( C. elegans ) contains at least 20 Skp1-like sequenses, whereas one or a few Skp1 is present in humans. Therefore, we studied C. elegans Skp1-like proteins (CeSkp1) that are likely to be variable components of SCF complex in addition to F-box proteins. At least, seven CeSkp1s were associated with C. elegans Cul-1 (CeCul-1) in yeast two-hybrid system as well as co-immunoprecipitation assay in mammalian cells, and these expression patterns were different in C. elegans . By RNA interference (RNAi), two of these CeSkp1s showed embyonic lethality and four showed the phenotype of slow growth. There were differences among CeSkp1s in ability to interact with F-box proteins. These results suggest that CeSkp1s, like F-box proteins, act as variable components of SCF complex in C. elegans .