https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ds-6051b.html Deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) catalyze the removal of ubiquitin, thereby reversing the activity of E3 ubiquitin ligases and are central to the control of protein abundance and function. Despite the growing interest in DUBs as therapeutic targets, cellular functions for DUBs remain largely unknown and technical challenges often preclude the identification of DUB substrates in a comprehensive manner. Here, we demonstrate that treatment with potent DUB inhibitors coupled to mass spectrometry-based proteomics can identify DUB substrates at a proteome-wide scale. We applied this approach to USP7, a DUB widely investigated as a therapeutic target and identified many known substrates and additional targets. We demonstrate that USP7 substrates are enriched for DNA repair enzymes and E3 ubiquitin ligases. This work provides not only a comprehensive annotation of USP7 substrates, but a general protocol widely applicable to other DUBs, which is critical for translational development of DUB targeted agents.Here, we report a method to regulate cellular protein levels by introducing a ubiquitin variant between a destabilizing domain (DD) and the regulated protein. When produced in the absence of a stabilizing ligand the DD dominates and the entire fusion protein is processively degraded by the proteasome. In the presence of the stabilizing ligand the fusion protein is metabolically stable and becomes a substrate for abundant ubiquitin-specific proteases, liberating a native, or a near-native protein-of-interest. This technique is thus particularly useful for the study of proteins whose free N terminus is required for proper function. In addition, removal of the DD in the presence of stabilizing ligand leads to higher expression levels of regulated protein when cells experience transient exposure to a stabilizing ligand, such as in a living animal receiving a single dose of a pharmacological agent as the stabilizing ligand.The a