30
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: not found

      Sequence composition of disordered regions fine-tunes protein half-life

      research-article

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          The proteasome controls the concentrations of most proteins in eukaryotic cells. It recognizes its protein substrates through ubiquitin tags and initiates degradation at disordered regions within the substrate. Here we find that the proteasome has pronounced preferences for the amino acid sequence composition of the regions at which it initiates degradation. Specifically, proteins where the initiation regions have biased amino acid compositions show longer half-lives in yeast. The relationship is also observed on a genomic scale in mouse cells. These preferences affect the degradation rates of proteins in vitro, can explain the unexpected stability of natural proteins in yeast, and may affect the accumulation of toxic proteins in disease. We propose that the proteasome’s sequence preferences provide a second component to the degradation code and may fine-tune protein half-life in cells.

          Related collections

          Most cited references60

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          The pairwise energy content estimated from amino acid composition discriminates between folded and intrinsically unstructured proteins.

          The structural stability of a protein requires a large number of interresidue interactions. The energetic contribution of these can be approximated by low-resolution force fields extracted from known structures, based on observed amino acid pairing frequencies. The summation of such energies, however, cannot be carried out for proteins whose structure is not known or for intrinsically unstructured proteins. To overcome these limitations, we present a novel method for estimating the total pairwise interaction energy, based on a quadratic form in the amino acid composition of the protein. This approach is validated by the good correlation of the estimated and actual energies of proteins of known structure and by a clear separation of folded and disordered proteins in the energy space it defines. As the novel algorithm has not been trained on unstructured proteins, it substantiates the concept of protein disorder, i.e. that the inability to form a well-defined 3D structure is an intrinsic property of many proteins and protein domains. This property is encoded in their sequence, because their biased amino acid composition does not allow sufficient stabilizing interactions to form. By limiting the calculation to a predefined sequential neighborhood, the algorithm was turned into a position-specific scoring scheme that characterizes the tendency of a given amino acid to fall into an ordered or disordered region. This application we term IUPred and compare its performance with three generally accepted predictors, PONDR VL3H, DISOPRED2 and GlobPlot on a database of disordered proteins.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Sequence complexity of disordered protein.

            Intrinsic disorder refers to segments or to whole proteins that fail to self-fold into fixed 3D structure, with such disorder sometimes existing in the native state. Here we report data on the relationships among intrinsic disorder, sequence complexity as measured by Shannon's entropy, and amino acid composition. Intrinsic disorder identified in protein crystal structures, and by nuclear magnetic resonance, circular dichroism, and prediction from amino acid sequence, all exhibit similar complexity distributions that are shifted to lower values compared to, but significantly overlapping with, the distribution for ordered proteins. Compared to sequences from ordered proteins, these variously characterized intrinsically disordered segments and proteins, and also a collection of low-complexity sequences, typically have obviously higher levels of protein-specific subsets of the following amino acids: R, K, E, P, and S, and lower levels of subsets of the following: C, W, Y, I, and V. The Swiss Protein database of sequences exhibits significantly higher amounts of both low-complexity and predicted-to-be-disordered segments as compared to a non-redundant set of sequences from the Protein Data Bank, providing additional data that nature is richer in disordered and low-complexity segments compared to the commonness of these features in the set of structurally characterized proteins.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Complete subunit architecture of the proteasome regulatory particle

              The proteasome is the major ATP-dependent protease in eukaryotic cells, but limited structural information strongly restricts a mechanistic understanding of its activities. The proteasome regulatory particle, consisting of the lid and base subcomplexes, recognizes and processes poly-ubiquitinated substrates. We used electron microscopy and a newly-developed heterologous expression system for the lid to delineate the complete subunit architecture of the regulatory particle. Our studies reveal the spatial arrangement of ubiquitin receptors, deubiquitinating enzymes, and the protein unfolding machinery at subnanometer resolution, outlining the substrate’s path to degradation. Unexpectedly, the ATPase subunits within the base unfoldase are arranged in a spiral staircase, providing insight into potential mechanisms for substrate translocation through the central pore. Large conformational rearrangements of the lid upon holoenzyme formation suggest allosteric regulation of deubiquitination. We provide a structural basis for the ability of the proteasome to degrade a diverse set of substrates and thus regulate vital cellular processes.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                101186374
                31761
                Nat Struct Mol Biol
                Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol.
                Nature structural & molecular biology
                1545-9993
                1545-9985
                12 March 2015
                02 February 2015
                March 2015
                01 September 2015
                : 22
                : 3
                : 214-221
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Molecular Biosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
                [2 ]Department of Molecular Biosciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
                [3 ]Frontier Research Core for Life Sciences, University of Toyama, Toyama, Japan
                [4 ]Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK
                Author notes
                [5 ]Corresponding author: matouschek@ 123456austin.utexas.edu

                Author contributions

                SF, TI, EI, HY and GK performed experiments, analyzed data and co-wrote the paper. MMB and AM directed experiments, analyzed data and co-wrote the paper.

                Article
                EMS61633
                10.1038/nsmb.2958
                4351145
                25643324
                a082dd51-1fb3-4bc6-80d6-f34ae74dc23d
                History
                Categories
                Article

                Molecular biology
                Molecular biology

                Comments

                Comment on this article