4.8 Article

The proteasome antechamber maintains substrates in an unfolded state

Journal

NATURE
Volume 467, Issue 7317, Pages 868-U142

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature09444

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Funding

  1. European Molecular Biology Organization [ALTF 827-2006]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  3. Canada Research Chair in Biochemistry
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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Eukaryotes and archaea use a protease called the proteasome that has an integral role in maintaining cellular function through the selective degradation of proteins(1-4). Proteolysis occurs in a barrelshaped 20S core particle, which in Thermoplasma acidophilum is built from four stacked homoheptameric rings of subunits, alpha and beta, arranged alpha(7)beta(7)beta(7)alpha(7) (ref. 5). These rings form three interconnected cavities, including a pair of antechambers (formed by alpha(7)beta(7)) through which substrates are passed before degradation and a catalytic chamber (beta(7)beta(7)) where the peptide-bond hydrolysis reaction occurs(4,5). Although it is clear that substrates must be unfolded to enter through narrow, gated passageways (13 angstrom in diameter) located on the alpha-rings(1,6,7), the structural and dynamical properties of substrates inside the proteasome antechamber remain unclear. Confinement in the antechamber might be expected to promote folding and thus impede proteolysis. Here we investigate the folding, stability and dynamics of three small protein substrates in the antechamber by methyl transverse-relaxation-optimized NMR spectroscopy(8). We show that these substrates interact actively with the antechamber walls and have drastically altered kinetic and equilibrium properties that maintain them in unstructured states so as to be accessible for hydrolysis.

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