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Subcomplexes of PA700, the 19 S Regulator of the 26 S Proteasome, Reveal Relative Roles of AAA Subunits in 26 S Proteasome Assembly and Activation and ATPase Activity
Authors:David Thompson  Kevin Hakala  and George N DeMartino
Institution:From the Department of Physiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390-9040
Abstract:We have identified, purified, and characterized three subcomplexes of PA700, the 19 S regulatory complex of the 26 S proteasome. These subcomplexes (denoted PS-1, PS-2, and PS-3) collectively account for all subunits present in purified PA700 but contain no overlapping components or significant levels of non-PA700 proteins. Each subcomplex contained two of the six AAA subunits (Rpt1–6) that form the binding interface of PA700 with the 20 S proteasome, the protease component of the 26 S proteasome. Unlike intact PA700, no individual PA700 subcomplex displayed ATPase activity or proteasome activating activity. However, both activities were manifested by ATP-dependent in vitro reconstitution of PA700 from the subcomplexes. We exploited functional reconstitution to define and distinguish roles of different PA700 subunits in PA700 function by selective alteration of subunits within individual subcomplexes prior to reconstitution. Carboxypeptidase treatment of either PS-2 or PS-3, subcomplexes containing specific Rpt subunits previously shown to have important roles in 26 S proteasome assembly and activation, inhibited these processes but did not affect PA700 reconstitution or ATPase activity. Thus, the intact C termini of both subunits are required for 26 S proteasome assembly and activation but not for PA700 reconstitution. Surprisingly, carboxypeptidase treatment of PS-1 also inhibited 26 S proteasome assembly and activation upon reconstitution with untreated PS-2 and PS-3. These results suggest a previously unidentified role for other PA700 subunits in 26 S proteasome assembly and activation. Our results reveal relative structural and functional relationships among the AAA subunits of PA700 and new insights about mechanisms of 26 S proteasome assembly and activation.The 26 S proteasome is a 2,500,000-Da protease complex that degrades polyubiquitylated proteins by an ATP-dependent mechanism (1, 2). The biochemical processes required for this function are divided between two subcomplexes that compose the holoenzyme (3, 4). The first, called 20 S proteasome or core particle, is a 700,000-Da complex that catalyzes peptide bond hydrolysis (5). The second, called PA700 or 19 S regulatory particle, is a 700,000-Da complex that mediates multiple aspects of proteasome function related to initial binding and subsequent delivery of substrates to the catalytic sites of the 20 S proteasome (6). The 20 S proteasome is composed of 28 subunits representing the products of 14 genes arranged in four axially stacked heteroheptameric rings (7, 8). Each of the two center β rings contains three different protease subunits that utilize N-terminal threonine residues as catalytic nucleophiles (5, 8, 9). These residues line an interior lumen formed by the stacked rings and thus are sequestered from interaction with substrates by a shell of 20 S proteasome subunits.PA700 is composed of 20 different subunits. Six of these subunits, termed Rpt1–6, are AAA2 (ATPases Associated with various cellular Activities) family members that confer ATPase activity to the complex and mediate energy-dependent proteolysis by the 26 S proteasome (2, 10). 26 S proteasome assembly from PA700 and 20 S proteasome requires ATP binding to Rpt subunits (1115). Binding of PA700 to the 20 S proteasome occurs at an axial interface between a heterohexameric ring of the PA700 Rpt subunits and the heteroheptameric outer ring of α-type 20 S proteasome subunits (16). Substrates enter the proteasome through a pore in the center of the α subunit ring that is reversibly gated by conformationally variable N-terminal residues of certain α subunits in response to PA700 binding (12, 1719). Although the degradation of polyubiquitylated proteins requires additional ATP hydrolysis-dependent actions by PA700, the assembled 26 S proteasome displays greatly increased rates of energy-independent degradation of short peptides by virtue of their increased access to catalytic sites via diffusion through the open pore (15, 18, 20).Recently, specific interactions between Rpt and α subunits that determine PA700-20 S proteasome binding and gate opening have been defined. These findings established nonequivalent roles among the six different Rpt subunits for these processes (12, 19). For example, carboxypeptidase A treatment of PA700 selectively cleaves the C termini of two Rpt subunits (Rpt2 and Rpt5) and renders PA700 incompetent for proteasome binding and activation (19). Remarkably, short peptides corresponding to the C terminus of either Rpt2 or Rpt5, but none of the other Rpt subunits, were sufficient to bind to the 20 S proteasome and activate peptide substrate hydrolysis by inducing gate opening (12, 15, 18). The C-terminal peptides of Rpt2 and Rpt5 appear to bind to different and distinct sites on the proteasome and produce additive effects on rates of peptide substrate hydrolysis, suggesting that pore size or another feature of gating can be variably modulated (19). These various results, however, do not specify whether the action of one or the other or both C-terminal peptides is essential for function of intact PA700.In addition to its role in activation, PA700 plays other essential roles in 26 S proteasome function related to substrate selection and processing. For example, PA700 captures polyubiquitylated proteins via multiple subunits that bind polyubiquitin chains (2123). Moreover, to ensure translocation of the bound ubiquitylated protein through the narrow opened substrate access pore for proteolysis, PA700 destabilizes the tertiary structure of the protein via chaperone-like activity and removes polyubiquitin chains via deubiquitylating activities of several different subunits (2430). These various functions appear to be highly coordinated and may be mechanistically linked to one another and to the hydrolysis of ATP by Rpt subunits during substrate processing.Despite support for this general model of PA700 action, there is a lack of detailed knowledge about how PA700 subunits are structurally organized and functionally linked. Previously, we identified and characterized a subcomplex of PA700 called “modulator” that contained two ATPase subunits, Rpt4 and Rpt5, and one non-ATPase subunit, p27 (31). Although this protein was identified by an assay that measured increased PA700-dependent proteasome activation, the mechanistic basis of this effect was not clear. Moreover, the modulator lacked detectable ATPase activity and proteasome activating activity. The latter feature is surprising in retrospect because of the newly identified capacity of Rpt5 to activate the proteasome directly (12, 19). This disparity suggests that specific interactions among multiple PA700 subunits determine the manifestation and regulation of various activities.This study extends our recent findings regarding relative roles of Rpt subunits in the regulation of proteasome function. It also provides new insights and significance to older work that identified and characterized the modulator as a subcomplex of PA700. Our findings unite two different lines of investigation to offer new information about the structure, function, and regulation of 26 S proteasome. They also offer insights about alternative models for assembly of PA700 and 26 S proteasome in intact cells.
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