4.8 Article

26S proteasomes become stably activated upon heat shock when ubiquitination and protein degradation increase

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2122482119

Keywords

shock; 26S proteasome; proteotoxic stress; ubiquitin conjugates; arsenite

Funding

  1. NIH-National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01 GM51923]
  2. Cure Alzheimer's Fund

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Heat shock induces protein unfolding, leading to increased activity of proteasomes and degradation of ubiquitinated proteins. This response helps cells clear damaged proteins and maintain cellular homeostasis under proteotoxic stress conditions.
Heat shock (HS) promotes protein unfolding, and cells respond by stimulating HS gene expression, ubiquitination of cell proteins, and proteolysis by the proteasome. Exposing HeLa and other cells to 43 degrees C for 2 h caused a twofold increase in the 26S proteasomes' peptidase activity assayed at 37 degrees C. This increase in activity occurred without any change in proteasome amount and did not require new protein synthesis. After affinity-purification from HS cells, 26S proteasomes still hydrolyzed peptides, adenosine 50-triphosphate, and ubiquitinated substrates more rapidly without any evident change in subunit composition, postsynthetic modification, or association with reported proteasome-activating proteins. After returning HS cells to 37 degrees C, ubiquitin conjugates and proteolysis fell rapidly, but proteasome activity remained high for at least 16 h. Exposure to arsenite, which also causes proteotoxic stress in the cytosol, but not tunicamycin, which causes endoplasmic reticulum stress, also increased ubiquitin conjugate levels and 26S proteasome activity. Although the molecular basis for the enhanced proteasomal activity remains elusive, we studied possible signaling mechanisms. Proteasome activation upon proteotoxic stress required the accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins since blocking ubiquitination by E1 inhibition during HS or arsenite exposure prevented the stimulation of 26S activity. Furthermore, increasing cellular content of ubiquitin conjugates at 37 degrees C by inhibiting deubiquitinating enzymes with RA190 or b-AP15 also caused proteasome activation. Thus, cells respond to proteotoxic stresses, apparently in response to the accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, by activating 26S proteasomes, which should help promote the clearance of damaged cell proteins.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available