Abstract

Cellular maintenance of protein homeostasis is essential for normal cellular function. The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) plays a central role in processing cellular proteins destined for degradation, but little is currently known about how misfolded cytosolic proteins are recognized by protein quality control machinery and targeted to the UPS for degradation in mammalian cells. Destabilizing domains (DDs) are small protein domains that are unstable and degraded in the absence of ligand, but whose stability is rescued by binding to a high affinity cell-permeable ligand. In the work presented here, we investigate the biophysical properties and cellular fates of a panel of FKBP12 mutants displaying a range of stabilities when expressed in mammalian cells. Our findings correlate observed cellular instability to both the propensity of the protein domain to unfold in vitro and the extent of ubiquitination of the protein in the non-permissive (ligand-free) state. We propose a model in which removal of stabilizing ligand causes the DD to unfold and be rapidly ubiquitinated by the UPS for degradation at the proteasome. The conditional nature of DD stability allows a rapid and non-perturbing switch from stable protein to unstable UPS substrate unlike other methods currently used to interrogate protein quality control, providing tunable control of degradation rates.

Highlights

  • GM068589. □S The on-line version of this article contains supplemental Figs

  • FKBP-derived Destabilizing Domains Are Rapidly Ubiquitinated in Absence of Shield-1—To test whether the Destabilizing domains (DDs) are targeted to the proteasome via the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) pathway, we utilized the Ubiquitin-associated domain (UBA) protein domain from human ubiquitin 2 conjugated to resin to probe for ubiquitin modifications [31]

  • Our panel of FKBP-derived DD mutants contains members displaying a range in basal stability when expressed in mammalian cells

Read more

Summary

Introduction

GM068589. □S The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Figs. These measurements support the more qualitative NMR study findings that very unstable DD mutants are partially to fully unfolded in the absence of ligand and that stabilization with Shield-1 causes the protein domains to adopt more stable folds.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call