Proteins are the tiny machines that keep our cells running, and how long they last in the cell often determines how well they can do their job. One important part of a protein is its tail end, known as the C-terminus. Although this region may seem small, it can vary in many ways.
C-terminal variations, arising from mutations and regulatory processes, can either stabilize or destabilize proteins, challenging the traditional view that aberrant termini primarily trigger degradation.
These changes can happen because of normal biological processes or due to errors, such as genetic mutations, alternative RNA splicing, or a process called translational readthrough, where the cell continues building a protein past its usual stopping point. As a result, cells can produce slightly different versions of the same protein, adding to the overall diversity of proteins in the body.
For a long time, scientists thought that unusual or abnormal protein endings mainly acted as warning signals, marking proteins for destruction. This helps cells remove damaged or potentially harmful proteins.
However, a new study shows that the story is more complex. The authors find that changes at the C-terminus do not always lead to protein breakdown. In some cases, these changes actually make proteins more stable, allowing them to stay active longer. In other cases, they still lead to faster degradation. This means that small changes at the end of a protein can have very different effects, sometimes in unexpected ways. The study is published in Nature Communications.
The authors also find that these variations can affect proteins involved in diseases such as cancer. Proteins that promote tumor growth, as well as those that normally suppress tumors, can both be influenced by changes at their C-termini. This suggests that these variations may play an important role in how diseases develop and progress.
"In addition, we have identified certain features, such as a tendency for the protein tail to be more hydrophobic, that make proteins more likely to be recognized and broken down by the cell's quality control systems.
"C-terminal variation is not simply a mark of defective proteins, but a versatile mechanism that cells use to fine-tune protein stability and function," says corresponding author Dr. Hsueh-Chi S. Yen.
To see article on Phys.org: https://phys.org/news/2026-03-diverse-terminal-variation-rewires-protein.html