Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 292, Issue 39, 29 September 2017, Pages 16310-16320
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Protein Synthesis and Degradation
The proteasome-interacting Ecm29 protein disassembles the 26S proteasome in response to oxidative stress

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M117.803619Get rights and content
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Oxidative stress has been implicated in multiple human neurological and other disorders. Proteasomes are multi-subunit proteases critical for the removal of oxidatively damaged proteins. To understand stress-associated human pathologies, it is important to uncover the molecular events underlying the regulation of proteasomes upon oxidative stress. To this end, we investigated H2O2 stress–induced molecular changes of the human 26S proteasome and determined that stress-induced 26S proteasome disassembly is conserved from yeast to human. Moreover, we developed and employed a new proteomic approach, XAP (in vivo cross-linking–assisted affinity purification), coupled with stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC)–based quantitative MS, to capture and quantify several weakly bound proteasome-interacting proteins and examine their roles in stress-mediated proteasomal remodeling. Our results indicate that the adapter protein Ecm29 is the main proteasome-interacting protein responsible for stress-triggered remodeling of the 26S proteasome in human cells. Importantly, using a disuccinimidyl sulfoxide–based cross-linking MS platform, we mapped the interactions of Ecm29 within itself and with proteasome subunits and determined the architecture of the Ecm29–proteasome complex with integrative structure modeling. These results enabled us to propose a structural model in which Ecm29 intrudes on the interaction between the 20S core particle and the 19S regulatory particle in the 26S proteasome, disrupting the proteasome structure in response to oxidative stress.

MS
oxidative stress
proteasome
protein cross-linking
protein purification
protein–protein interaction
structural model

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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R01GM074830 (to L. H.), R01GM106003 (to L. H. and S. R.), and R01GM083960 and P41GM109824 (to A. S.). The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

This article contains supplemental Figs. S1–S7, Tables S1–S5, Methods, and References.

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Supported by National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship 1650113.