“…Such stress stimuli include DNA damage, heat shock, proteasomal inhibition, viral infection or ischemic challenge. These significant rearrangements in the SUMO proteome appear to represent a versatile immediate stress response, required, for example, for DNA damage repair (2,7,18) or to protect the brain against focal cerebral ischemic damage (19). However, constitutively increased sumoylation has rather negative effects and correlates with resistance to cancer treatments, increased tumor metastasis and relapse (20)(21)(22)(23)(24).…”