Abstract

Temperature-sensitive (TS) missense mutants have been foundational for characterization of essential gene function. However, an unbiased approach for analysis of biochemical and biophysical changes in TS missense mutants within the context of their functional proteomes is lacking. We applied MS-based thermal proteome profiling (TPP) to investigate the proteome-wide effects of missense mutations in an application that we refer to as mutant thermal proteome profiling (mTPP). This study characterized global impacts of temperature sensitivity-inducing missense mutations in two different subunits of the 26S proteasome. The majority of alterations identified by RNA-Seq and global proteomics were similar between the mutants, which could suggest that a similar functional disruption is occurring in both missense variants. Results from mTPP, however, provide unique insights into the mechanisms that contribute to the TS phenotype in each mutant, revealing distinct changes that were not obtained using only steady-state transcriptome and proteome analyses. Computationally, multisite λ-dynamics simulations add clear support for mTPP experimental findings. This work shows that mTPP is a precise approach to measure changes in missense mutant-containing proteomes without the requirement for large amounts of starting material, specific antibodies against proteins of interest, and/or genetic manipulation of the biological system. Although experiments were performed under permissive conditions, mTPP provided insights into the underlying protein stability changes that cause dramatic cellular phenotypes observed at nonpermissive temperatures. Overall, mTPP provides unique mechanistic insights into missense mutation dysfunction and connection of genotype to phenotype in a rapid, nonbiased fashion.

Highlights

  • The ability to systematically assess the function of individual genes and gene products is critical for gaining a full picture of how the cell works [1]

  • For our model system in these experiments, we chose TS yeast strains with missense mutations within individual subunits of the 26S proteasome complex, an essential protein complex responsible for the majority of selective proteolysis occurring in the cell [60, 61]

  • Because the proteasome plays a major role in protein turnover and homeostasis, the large-scale changes that could occur in terms of protein abundance levels and protein post-translational modifications make it an intriguing model for these studies

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to systematically assess the function of individual genes and gene products is critical for gaining a full picture of how the cell works [1]. As both rpn5-ts and pup2-ts are within the same protein complex, it was unsurprising that both global proteomics and RNA-Seq presented a large number of similar changes between both mutants.

Results
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