subunit exchange
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2021 ◽  
pp. 417-431
Author(s):  
Takashi Matsuhira ◽  
Keizo Yamamoto ◽  
Hiromi Sakai
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (22) ◽  
pp. 12497
Author(s):  
Lipeng Gan ◽  
Qilin Shangguan ◽  
Fang Zhang ◽  
Xiaomei Tong ◽  
Dandan Qi ◽  
...  

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is closely related to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development. To investigate the mechanism of HBV causing HCC, we previously analyzed the transcription of the HBV-transgenic cell line HepG2-4D14 and parental HepG2 cells and identified a subset of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) differentially expressed between them. In this study, we focus on lncRNA LINC01010, as it is significantly downregulated in HepG2-4D14 cells and in liver tissues of HCC patients, and positively correlated with survival. We found that HBV-encoded HBx can reduce the transcription of LINC01010. Functional analysis showed that the overexpression of LINC01010 inhibits proliferation, migration and invasion of HepG2 cells while the knockdown of LINC01010 promotes these processes. By taking the approach of RNA immunoprecipitation (RIP) and mass spectrometry, we identified that LINC01010 can interact with vimentin. Further studies demonstrated that LINC01010 negatively affects the vimentin network extension and causes more rapid subunit exchange and lower stability of vimentin filaments. In addition, LINC01010 can reduce the amount of insoluble vimentin within cells, which suggests that LINC01010 interfers with vimentin polymerization. These data indicate that LINC01010 can inhibit the assembly of vimentin filament. Thus, we revealed that HBV HBx-downregulated LINC01010, which suppresses cell proliferation and migration by negatively regulating the formation of vimentin filament. Taken together, LINC01010 is a potential tumor suppressor that may restrain HBV-related HCC development.


Author(s):  
Ayelén González Montoro ◽  
Prado Vargas Duarte ◽  
Kathrin Auffarth ◽  
Stefan Walter ◽  
Florian Fröhlich ◽  
...  

The hexameric HOPS (homotypic fusion and protein sorting) complex is a conserved tethering complex at the lysosome-like vacuole, where it mediates tethering and promotes all fusion events involving this organelle. The Vps39 subunit of this complex also engages in a membrane contact site between the vacuole and the mitochondria, called vCLAMP. Additionally, four subunits of HOPS are also part of the endosomal CORVET tethering complex. Here, we analyzed the partition of HOPS and CORVET subunits between the different complexes by tracing their localization and function. We find that Vps39 has a specific role in vCLAMP formation beyond tethering, and that vCLAMPs and HOPS compete for the same pool of Vps39. In agreement, we find that the CORVET subunit Vps3 can take the position of Vps39 in HOPS. This endogenous pool of a Vps3-hybrid complex is affected by Vps3 or Vps39 levels, suggesting that HOPS and CORVET assembly is dynamic. Our data shed light on how individual subunits of tethering complexes such as Vps39 can participate in other functions, while maintaining the remaining subcomplex available for its function in tethering and fusion.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danny D Sahtoe ◽  
Florian Praetorius ◽  
Alexis Courbet ◽  
Yang Hsia ◽  
Basile IM Wicky ◽  
...  

Asymmetric multi-protein complexes that undergo subunit exchange play central roles in biology, but present a challenge for protein design. The individual components must contain interfaces enabling reversible addition to and dissociation from the complex, but be stable and well behaved in isolation. Here we employ a set of implicit negative design principles to generate beta sheet mediated heterodimers which enable the generation of a wide variety of structurally well defined asymmetric assemblies. Crystal structures of the heterodimers are very close to the design models, and unlike previously designed orthogonal heterodimer sets, the subunits are stable, folded and monomeric in isolation and rapidly assemble upon mixing. Rigid fusion of individual heterodimer halves to repeat proteins yields central assembly hubs that can bind two or three different proteins across different interfaces. We use these connectors to assemble linearly arranged hetero-oligomers with up to 6 unique components, branched hetero-oligomers, closed C4-symmetric two-component rings, and hetero-oligomers assembled on a cyclic homo-oligomeric central hub, and demonstrate such complexes can readily reconfigure through subunit exchange. Our approach provides a general route to designing asymmetric reconfigurable protein systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 220 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ewa Bomba-Warczak ◽  
Seby L. Edassery ◽  
Timothy J. Hark ◽  
Jeffrey N. Savas

Long-lived proteins (LLPs) have recently emerged as vital components of intracellular structures whose function is coupled to long-term stability. Mitochondria are multifaceted organelles, and their function hinges on efficient proteome renewal and replacement. Here, using metabolic stable isotope labeling of mice combined with mass spectrometry (MS)–based proteomic analysis, we demonstrate remarkable longevity for a subset of the mitochondrial proteome. We discovered that mitochondrial LLPs (mt-LLPs) can persist for months in tissues harboring long-lived cells, such as brain and heart. Our analysis revealed enrichment of mt-LLPs within the inner mitochondrial membrane, specifically in the cristae subcompartment, and demonstrates that the mitochondrial proteome is not turned over in bulk. Pioneering cross-linking experiments revealed that mt-LLPs are spatially restricted and copreserved within protein OXPHOS complexes, with limited subunit exchange throughout their lifetimes. This study provides an explanation for the exceptional mitochondrial protein lifetimes and supports the concept that LLPs provide key structural stability to multiple large and dynamic intracellular structures.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruben Perez-Carrasco ◽  
María-José Franco-Oñate ◽  
Jean-Charles Walter ◽  
Jérôme Dorignac ◽  
Fred Geniet ◽  
...  

The bacterial flagellar motor (BFM) is the membrane-embedded rotary molecular motor which turns the flagellum that provides thrust to many bacterial species. This large multimeric complex, composed of a few dozen constituent proteins, has emerged as a hallmark of dynamic subunit exchange. The stator units are inner-membrane ion channels which dynamically bind and unbind to the peptidoglycan at the rotor periphery, consuming the ion motive force (IMF) and applying torque to the rotor when bound. The dynamic exchange is known to be a function of the viscous load on the flagellum, allowing the bacterium to dynamically adapt to its local viscous environment, but the molecular mechanisms of exchange and mechanosensitivity remain to be revealed. Here, by actively perturbing the steady-state stator stoichiometry of individual motors, we reveal a stoichiometry-dependent asymmetry in stator remodeling kinetics. We interrogate the potential effect of next-neighbor interactions and local stator unit depletion and find that neither can explain the observed asymmetry. We then simulate and fit two mechanistically diverse models which recapitulate the asymmetry, finding stator assembly dynamics to be particularly well described by a two-state catch-bond mechanism.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Biancalana ◽  
Eviatar Natan ◽  
Michael J. Lenardo ◽  
Alan R. Fersht
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 2327
Author(s):  
Joanna Gruszczynska-Biegala ◽  
Andrzej Stefan ◽  
Andrzej A. Kasprzak ◽  
Piotr Dobryszycki ◽  
Sofia Khaitlina ◽  
...  

Formation of stable actin filaments, critically important for actin functions, is determined by the ionic strength of the solution. However, not much is known about the elements of the actin fold involved in ionic-strength-dependent filament stabilization. In this work, F-actin was destabilized by Cu2+ binding to Cys374, and the effects of solvent conditions on the dynamic properties of F-actin were correlated with the involvement of Segment 227-235 in filament stabilization. The results of our work show that the presence of Mg2+ at the high-affinity cation binding site of Cu-modified actin polymerized with MgCl2 strongly enhances the rate of filament subunit exchange and promotes the filament instability. In the presence of 0.1 M KCl, the filament subunit exchange was 2–3-fold lower than that in the MgCl2-polymerized F-actin. This effect correlates with the reduced accessibility of the D-loop and Segment 227-235 on opposite filament strands, consistent with an ionic-strength-dependent conformational change that modulates involvement of Segment 227-235 in stabilization of the intermonomer interface. KCl may restrict the mobility of the α-helix encompassing part of Segment 227-235 and/or be bound to Asp236 at the boundary of Segment 227-235. These results provide experimental evidence for the involvement of Segment 227-235 in salt-induced stabilization of contacts within the actin filament and suggest that they can be weakened by mutations characteristic of actin-associated myopathies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kanika Arora ◽  
Bhishem Thakur ◽  
Arpita Mrigwani ◽  
Purnananda Guptasarma

AbstractHU is a nucleoid-associated protein (NAP) that helps bacterial chromosomal DNA to remain compact. Escherichia coli contains two homologs of HU that are ~ 70 % identical: HU-A and HU-B. The early log phase, late log phase, and stationary phase of E. coli growth are reported to be dominated, respectively, by HU-AA homodimers, HU-BB homo-dimers, and HU-AB heterodimers. Here, we show that the formation of HU-AB heterodimers occurs to a much lower degree in HU chains that have a displaced N-terminus, whether through addition of an N-terminal affinity (polyhistidine) tag, or fusion of a fluorescent protein. A combination of mass spectrometry, spectroscopy, chromatography, and electrophoresis (exploring glutaraldehyde crosslinking of subunits) was used to study the mixing, co-expression, unfolding and refolding of HU-AA and HU-BB homodimers. The data suggests that, in HU polypeptides with N-terminal extension, whereas inter-subunit contacts between the alpha helical N-terminal domains (NTDs) undergo facile unfolding and dissociation, inter-subunit contacts between the beta sheet- and IDR-dominated C-terminal domains (CTDs) fail to do so, due to persistence of hydrophobic inter-subunit interactions between two beta sheets. This persistence causes HU to remain nominally dimeric even after substantive unfolding, and frustrates subunit exchange and heterodimer formation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rintaro Inoue ◽  
Yusuke Sakamaki ◽  
Takumi Takata ◽  
Kathleen Wood ◽  
Ken Morishima ◽  
...  

AbstractAlphaB crystallin (αB-crystallin) is a key protein for maintaining the long-term transparency of the eye lens. In the eye lens, αB-crystallin is a “dynamical” oligomer regulated by subunit exchange between the oligomers. To elucidate the unsettled mechanism of subunit exchange in αB-crystallin oligomers, the study was carried out at two different protein concentrations, 28.5 mg/mL (dense sample) and 0.45 mg/mL (dilute sample), through inverse contrast matching small-angle neutron scattering. Interestingly, the exchange rate of the dense sample was the same as that of the dilute sample. From analytical ultracentrifuge measurements, the coexistence of small molecular weight components and oligomers was detected, regardless of the protein concentration. The model proposed that subunit exchange could proceed through the assistance of monomers and other small oligomers; the key mechanism is attaching/detaching monomers and other small oligomers to/from oligomers. Moreover, this model successfully reproduced the experimental results for both dense and dilute solutions. It is concluded that the monomer and other small oligomers attaching/detaching mainly regulates the subunit exchange in αB-crystallin oligomer.


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