Abstract

Proteasomes function as the main nonlysosomal machinery of intracellular proteolysis and are involved in the regulation of the majority of important cellular processes. Despite the considerable progress that has been made in understanding the functioning of proteasomes, some issues (in particular, the RNase activity of these ribonucleoprotein complexes and its regulation) remain poorly investigated. In this study, we found to several proteins with electrophoretic mobility that corresponds to that of 20S subunits of the core proteasome complex exhibit endoribonuclease activity with respect to the sense and antisense sequences of the c-myc mRNA 3′-UTR. Mass-spectrometric analysis of tryptic hydrolysates of these proteins showed that the samples contained 20S proteasome subunits—α1 (PSMA6), α5 (PSMA5), α6 (PSMA1), and α7 (PSMA3). A number of new phosphorylation sites of α1 (PSMA6) and α7 (PSMA3) subunits were found, and a form of α5 (PSMA5) subunit with a deletion of 20 N-terminal amino-acid residues was identified. The observed differences in the manifestation of endonuclease activity by individual subunits are apparently due to posttranslational modifications of these proteins (in particular, phosphorylation). It was shown that the specificity of RNase activity changes upon proteasome dephosphorylation and under the influence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ cations. It is concluded that posttranslational modifications of proteasome subunits affect the specificity of their RNase activity.

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