Abstract
BackgroundThe 'lid' subcomplex of the 26S proteasome and the COP9 signalosome (CSN complex) share a common architecture consisting of six subunits harbouring a so-called PCI domain (proteasome, CSN, eIF3) at their C-terminus, plus two subunits containing MPN domains (Mpr1/Pad1 N-terminal). The translation initiation complex eIF3 also contains PCI- and MPN-domain proteins, but seems to deviate from the 6+2 stoichiometry. Initially, the PCI domain was defined as the region of detectable sequence similarity between the components mentioned above.ResultsDuring an exhaustive bioinformatical analysis of proteasome components, we detected multiple instances of tetratrico-peptide repeats (TPR) in the N-terminal region of most PCI proteins, suggesting that their homology is not restricted to the PCI domain. We also detected a previously unrecognized PCI domain in the eIF3 component eIF3k, a protein whose 3D-structure has been determined recently. By using profile-guided alignment techniques, we show that the structural elements found in eIF3k are most likely conserved in all PCI proteins, resulting in a structural model for the canonical PCI domain.ConclusionOur model predicts that the homology domain PCI is not a true domain in the structural sense but rather consists of two subdomains: a C-terminal 'winged helix' domain with a key role in PCI:PCI interaction, preceded by a helical repeat region. The TPR-like repeats detected in the N-terminal region of PCI proteins most likely form an uninterrupted extension of the repeats found within the PCI domain boundaries. This model allows an interpretation of several puzzling experimental results.
Highlights
The 'lid' subcomplex of the 26S proteasome and the COP9 signalosome (CSN complex) share a common architecture consisting of six subunits harbouring a so-called PCI domain at their C-terminus, plus two subunits containing MPN domains (Mpr1/Pad1 N-terminal)
tetratrico-peptide repeats (TPR)-like helical repeats in PCI proteins In most PCI proteins, the canonical PCI domain occupies a region of approximately 190 residues close to the carboxy-terminus of the sequence
To further investigate if a TPR-like structure should be assumed for the N-terminal portions of all PCI proteins, we performed a secondary structure prediction for each of the protein families individually
Summary
The 'lid' subcomplex of the 26S proteasome and the COP9 signalosome (CSN complex) share a common architecture consisting of six subunits harbouring a so-called PCI domain (proteasome, CSN, eIF3) at their C-terminus, plus two subunits containing MPN domains (Mpr1/Pad N-terminal). These complexes are composed of multiple subunits harbouring the PCI domain, named after the three participating complexes [2], sometimes referred to as the PINT domain [3] Other subunits of these complexes are characterized by a second shared homology domain called MPN (Mpr1Pad N-terminal) [2,3]. Among these complexes, the proteasome lid and the CSN share a particular degree of analogy.
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