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Transfer 5 µl from your PCR tube to fresh tube, add 1 µl dye & run on 0.7% gel. Protein degradation Some have motifs marking them for polyubiquitination : E1 enzymes activate ubiquitin E2 enzymes conjugate ubiquitin E3 ub ligases determine specificity, eg for N-terminus.
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Transfer 5 µl from your PCR tube to fresh tube, add 1 µl dye & run on 0.7% gel
Protein degradation • Some have motifs marking them for polyubiquitination: • E1 enzymes activate ubiquitin • E2 enzymes conjugate ubiquitin • E3 ub ligases determine specificity, eg for N-terminus
E3 ubiquitin ligases determine specificity • >1300 E3 ligases in Arabidopsis • 4 main classes according to cullin scaffolding protein • RBX positions E2 • DDB1 positions DCAF/DWD • DCAF/DWD picks substrate • NOT4 is an E3 ligase & a component of the CCR4–NOT de-A complex • CCR4–NOT de-A • Complex regulates pol II • Transcription, mRNA • deg & prot deg are • linked!
DWD Proteins • Tested members of each subgroup for DDB1 binding • co-immunoprecipitation
DWD Proteins • Tested members of each subgroup for DDB1 binding • co-immunoprecipitation • Two-hybrid: identifies • interacting proteins
DWD Proteins • Tested members of each subgroup for DDB1 binding • co-immunoprecipitation • Two-hybrid: identifies • interacting proteins • Only get transcription if • one hybrid supplies Act D • & other supplies DNA • Binding Domain
Regulating E3 ligases The COP9 signalosome (CSN), a complex of 8 proteins, regulates E3 ligases by removing Nedd8 from cullin CAND1 then blocks cullin Ubc12 replaces Nedd8 Regulates DNA-damage response, cell-cycle & gene expression Not all E3 ligases associate with Cullins!
COP1 is a non-cullin-associated E3 ligase • Protein degradation is important for light regulation • COP1/SPA1 tags transcription factors for degradation • W/O COP1 they act in dark • In light COP1 is exported to cytoplasm so TF can act
COP1 is a non-cullin-associated E3 ligase • Recent data indicates that COP1 may also associate with CUL4
Protein degradationrate varies 100x • Most have motifs marking them for polyubiquitination: taken to proteosome & destroyed • Other signals for selective degradation include PEST & KFERQ • PEST : found in many rapidly • degraded proteins • e.g. ABCA1 (which exports • cholesterol in association with • apoA-I) is degraded by calpain
Protein degradationrate varies 100x • Other signals for selective degradation include PEST & KFERQ • PEST : found in many rapidly degraded proteins • e.g. ABCA1 (which exports cholesterol in association with apoA-I) is degraded by calpain • Deletion increases t1/2 10x, adding PEST drops t1/2 10x
Protein degradationrate varies 100x • Other signals for selective degradation include PEST & KFERQ • PEST : found in many rapidly degraded proteins • e.g. ABCA1 (which exports cholesterol in association with apoA-I) is degraded by calpain • Deletion increases t1/2 10x, adding PEST drops t1/2 10x • Sometimes targets poly-Ub
Protein degradationrate varies 100x • Other signals for selective degradation include PEST & KFERQ • PEST : found in many rapidly degraded proteins • e.g. ABCA1 (which exports cholesterol in association with apoA-I) is degraded by calpain • Deletion increases t1/2 10x, adding PEST drops t1/2 10x • Sometimes targets poly-Ub • Recent yeast study doesn’t support general role
Protein degradationrate varies 100x • Other signals for selective degradation include PEST & KFERQ • PEST : found in many rapidly degraded proteins • e.g. ABCA1 (which exports cholesterol in association with apoA-I) is degraded by calpain • Deletion increases t1/2 10x, adding PEST drops t1/2 10x • Sometimes targets poly-Ub • Recent yeast study doesn’t support general role • KFERQ: cytosolic proteins with KFERQ are selectively taken up by lysosomes in chaperone-mediated autophagy under conditions of nutritional or oxidative stress.
Protein degradationin bacteria Also highly regulated, involves chaperone like proteins Lon
Protein degradationin bacteria Also highly regulated, involves chaperone like proteins Lon Clp
Protein degradationin bacteria Also highly regulated, involves chaperone like proteins Lon Clp FtsH in IM
PROTEIN TARGETING All proteins are made with an “address”which determines their final cellular location Addresses are motifs within proteins
PROTEIN TARGETING All proteins are made with “addresses”which determine their location Addresses are motifs within proteins Remain in cytoplasm unless contain information sending it elsewhere
PROTEIN TARGETING Targeting sequencesare both necessary& sufficient to send reporter proteins to new compartments.
PROTEIN TARGETING 2 Pathways in E.coli http://www.membranetransport.org/ Tat: for periplasmic redox proteins & thylakoid lumen!
2 Pathways in E.coli • Tat: for periplasmic redox proteins & thylakoid lumen! • Preprotein has signal seqS/TRRXFLK
2 Pathways in E.coli • Tat: for periplasmic redox proteins & thylakoid lumen! • Preprotein has signal seqS/TRRXFLK • Make preprotein, folds • & binds cofactor in • cytosol
2 Pathways in E.coli • Tat: for periplasmic redox proteins & thylakoid lumen! • Preprotein has signal seqS/TRRXFLK • Make preprotein, folds • & binds cofactor in • cytosol • Binds Tat in • IM & is sent to • periplasm
2 Pathways in E.coli • Tat: for periplasmic redox proteins & thylakoid lumen! • Preprotein has signal seqS/TRRXFLK • Make preprotein, folds & binds cofactor in cytosol • Binds Tat in IM & is sent to periplasm • Signal seq is • removed in • periplasm
2 Pathways in E.coli http://www.membranetransport.org/ • Tat: for periplasmic redox proteins & thylakoid lumen! • Sec pathway • SecB binds preprotein • as it emerges from rib
Sec pathway • SecB binds preprotein as it emerges from rib & prevents folding
Sec pathway • SecB binds preprotein as it emerges from rib & prevents folding • Guides it to SecA, which drives it through SecYEG into periplasm using ATP
Sec pathway • SecB binds preprotein as it emerges from rib & prevents folding • Guides it to SecA, which drives it through SecYEG into periplasm using ATP • In periplasm signal peptide is removed and protein folds
Sec pathway part deux • SRP binds preprotein as it emerges from rib & stops translation • Guides rib to FtsY • FtsY & SecA guide it to SecYEG , where it resumes translation & inserts protein into membrane as it is made
Periplasmic proteins with the correct signals (exposed after cleaving signal peptide) are exported by XcpQ system
PROTEIN TARGETING Protein synthesis always begins on free ribosomes in cytoplasm
2 Protein Targeting pathways Protein synthesis always begins on free ribosomes in cytoplasm 1) proteins ofplastids, mitochondria, peroxisomes andnucleiare imported post-translationally
2 Protein Targeting pathways Protein synthesis always begins on free ribosomes In cytoplasm 1) proteins ofplastids, mitochondria, peroxisomes andnucleiare imported post-translationally made in cytoplasm, then imported when complete
2 Protein Targeting pathways Protein synthesis always begins on free ribosomes In cytoplasm 1) Post -translational: proteins ofplastids,mitochondria, peroxisomesandnuclei 2) Endomembrane system proteins are imported co-translationally
2 Protein Targeting pathways 1) Post -translational 2) Co-translational: Endomembrane system proteins are imported co-translationally inserted in RER as they are made
2 pathways for Protein Targeting 1) Post -translational 2) Co-translational: Endomembrane system proteins are imported co-translationally inserted in RER as they are made transported to final destination in vesicles
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS Protein synthesis always begins on free ribosomes in cytoplasm in vivo always see mix of free and attached ribosomes
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS Protein synthesis begins on free ribosomes in cytoplasm endomembrane proteins have "signal sequence"that directs them to RER Signal sequence
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS Protein synthesis begins on free ribosomes in cytoplasm endomembrane proteins have "signal sequence"that directs them to RER “attached” ribosomes are tethered to RER by the signal sequence
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS • Protein synthesis begins on free ribosomes in cytoplasm • Endomembrane proteins have"signal sequence"that directs them to RER • SRP (Signal Recognition Peptide) binds signal sequence when it pops out of ribosome & swaps GDP for GTP
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS • SRP (Signal Recognition Peptide) binds signal sequence when it pops out of ribosome & swaps GDP for GTP • 1 RNA & 7 proteins
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS • SRP binds signal sequence when it pops out of ribosome • SRP stops protein synthesis until it binds “docking protein”(SRP receptor) in RER
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS SRP stops protein synthesis until it binds “docking protein”(SRP receptor) in RER Ribosome binds Translocon & secretes protein through it as it is made
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS SRP stops protein synthesis until it binds “docking protein”(SRP receptor) in RER Ribosome binds Translocon & secretes protein through it as it is made BiP (a chaperone) helps the protein fold in the lumen
SIGNAL HYPOTHESIS Ribosome binds Translocon & secretes protein through it as it is made secretion must be cotranslational
Subsequent events • Simplest case: • 1) signal is cleaved within lumen by signal peptidase • 2) BiP helps protein fold correctly • 3) protein is soluble inside lumen
Subsequent events Complications: proteins embedded in membranes
proteins embedded in membranes • protein has a stop-transfer sequence • too hydrophobic to enter aqueous lumen
proteins embedded in membranes • protein has a stop-transfer sequence • too hydrophobic to enter lumen • therefore gets stuck in membrane • ribosome releases translocon, finishes job in cytoplasm