| Literature DB >> 28258412 |
Xing Guo1, Xiuliang Huang2, Mark J Chen3.
Abstract
The 26S proteasome at the center of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is essential for virtually all cellular processes of eukaryotes. A common misconception about the proteasome is that, once made, it remains as a static and uniform complex with spontaneous and constitutive activity for protein degradation. Recent discoveries have provided compelling evidence to support the exact opposite insomuch as the 26S proteasome undergoes dynamic and reversible phosphorylation under a variety of physiopathological conditions. In this review, we summarize the history and current understanding of proteasome phosphorylation, and advocate the idea of targeting proteasome kinases/phosphatases as a new strategy for clinical interventions of several human diseases.Entities:
Keywords: kinase; phosphatase; phosphorylation; proteasome; protein degradation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28258412 PMCID: PMC5359188 DOI: 10.1007/s13238-017-0382-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Cell ISSN: 1674-800X Impact factor: 14.870
Figure 1Structural view of a selection of human 26S proteasome phosphosites. Surface (left, middle) and sectional (right) views of human 26S proteasome (gray) are shown based on high-resolution cryo-EM structures (PDB 5GJR). Phosphosites of subunits Rpt6 (lemon), Rpn6 (light pink), α7 (smudge), Rpt3 (violet), Rpn2 (salmon), α4 (pale cyan), α2 (wheat), β7 (pale yellow), β1 (pale green) are marked with circles. Sites visible from available structures are highlighted in red, while predicted positions of invisible sites are represented with a blue star
Figure 2Representative sequence motifs of human proteasome phosphosites. All human proteasome phosphorylation sites were divided into pS, pT, and pY groups and their adjacent sequences were separately analysed with Motif-All. Similar motifs were combined and sequence logos of the ten most abundant representatives are shown. The X-axis shows amino acid positions with the phosphosites in the center. The Y-axis is the information content, which takes into account the frequency of amino acid across the proteome (background frequency) and is therefore a better measure
A selection of human proteasome phosphosites with site-specific information.
| Subunit | Site | Sequence | Function | Kinase | Regulatory cues | Position on proteasome* | Predicted mechanism | Antibody | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rpt6 | S120 | RVALRND | Increases proteasome activity and tethering with actin cytoskeleton | CaMKIIα | Neuronal activity | Top of the OB-ring, close to the C-terminal helix of Rpn3 | Facilitates substrate unfolding and translocation | Yes | Djakovic et al., |
| Rpn6 | S14 | VEFQRAQ | Increases proteasome activity | PKA | cAMP signaling | Close to distal tip of Rpn6-N terminus, facing (but not close to) the α-ring | Stabilizes RP-CP interaction | Yes# | Lokireddy et al., |
| α7 | S243 S250 | E | Regulates the level of 26S proteasome? | CK2? | Constitutive. (IFN-γ?) | Outer surface of the α-ring, close to Rpt4 | Stabilizes RP-CP interaction | No | Mason et al., |
| Rpt3 | T25 | LSVSRPQ | Increases proteasome activity | DYRK2 | Cell cycle | * N-terminal to the coiled-coil region, contacting Rpn2 | Facilitates Rpn2-lid rotation to facilitate substrate degradation | Yes | Guo et al., |
| Rpn2 | T273 | QNLRTVG | Inhibits proteasome activity | p38 | Osmotic stress | * Between the N-terminal helical domain and C-terminal toroid | Regulates the motion transfer of Rpn2-lid rotation | Yes | Lee et al., |
| α4 | Y106 | EDPVTVE | Maintains α4 protein level | Abl/Arg | ? | Buried in the cleft between α4/α5, very close to β5 | Regulates CP integrity | No | Li et al., |
| α4 | Y153 | QTDPSGT | Inhibits proteasome activity | Abl/Arg | ? | Buried in the cleft between α4/α5, very close to α5 | Regulates CP integrity | No | Liu et al., |
| α2 | Y121 | VASVMQE | Controls nuclear import of the proteasome? | ? | ? | Inner surface of the CP chamber | ? | No | Benedict and Clawson, |
| β7 | S249 | VEIEGPL | ? | ? | Decreased in cancer cells? | Outer surface of the β-ring | ? | Yes | Eang, et al., |
| β1 | S158 | GMMVRQ | Regulates β1 binding to p27Kip1? | ? | ? | Outer surface of the β-ring, close to β1 from the other β-ring | Regulates CP integrity | No | Yuan et al., |
* Estimated positions of sites that are not visible in available 26S proteasome structures
# To be published (personal communication with A. L. Goldberg)
Note: A total of 11 phosphosites that have been studied using low-throughput methods (i.e. “LTP” ≥ 1 in PhosphoSitePlus) are summarized here. The roles they play in proteasome function and how they are regulated are listed. Their exact or predicted positions on the 26S proteasome complex can be seen in Fig. 1