Abstract
Hydrogen-Deuterium eXchange coupled to Mass Spectrometry (HDX-MS) is now common practice in structural biology. However, it is most of the time applied to rather small oligomeric complexes. Here, we report on the use of HDX-MS to investigate conformational differences between the human standard 20S (std20S) and immuno 20S (i20s) proteasomes alone or in complex with PA28αβ or PA28γ activators. Their solvent accessibility is analyzed through a dedicated bioinformatic pipeline including stringent statistical analysis and 3D visualization. These data confirm the existence of allosteric differences between the std20S and i20S at the surface of the α-ring triggered from inside the catalytic β-ring. Additionally, binding of the PA28 regulators to the 20S proteasomes modify solvent accessibility due to conformational changes of the β-rings. This work is not only a proof-of-concept that HDX-MS can be used to get structural insights on large multi-protein complexes in solution, it also demonstrates that the binding of the std20S or i20S subtype to any of its PA28 activator triggers allosteric changes that are specific to this 20S/PA28 pair.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
The ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) is central to proteostasis. Its most downstream element is the 26S proteasome that clears the cells of abnormal, denatured, or damaged proteins and regulates degradation of short-lived proteins, in most cases conjugated to ubiquitin. The 26S proteasome is a highly conserved compartmentalized multicatalytic protease composed of more than 30 subunits constituting the 20S catalytic core and the 19S regulatory complex1. Its activity is directly involved in many cytokines and hub proteins intracellular concentration2, and regulates immunogenic peptide production3. It is the focus of intense regulation and dynamically localizes within cells in response to physiological and external perturbations4,5 and its genetic polymorphism is directly responsible for numerous pathologies including cancer, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes to name a few6,7.
The main mechanism regulating the proteasome activity is the substitution of the catalytic subunits β1, β2, and β5, respectively harboring caspase-like, trypsin-like, and chymotrypsin-like activities, and constituting the standard 20S (std20S) with other subunits. For example, the immunoproteasome (i20S) contains the immuno-subunits β1i, β2i, and β5i that have different cleavage specificities and generate immunogenic peptides8. It is strongly expressed in immune cells and can be induced in most tissues by interferon-γ.
The proteolytic activity of the 20S is also regulated by interacting proteins, the most common being the ATP-dependent 19S activator involved in the UPS degradation pathway. However, less abundant ubiquitin-independent regulators such as PA28αβ, PA28γ, or PA200 also activate the 20S and modify its substrate specificity. In addition, a vast collection of Proteasome Interacting Proteins (PIPs) regulate or assist proteasomal functions9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16.
Besides its subunit composition and association with regulators and/or PIPs, the proteasome is subjected to a wide variety of post-translational modifications (PTMs) affecting its subunits activity17,18,19. The combination of these three levels of regulation (catalytic subunits, regulators, PTMs) implies a wide proteasome subtype heterogeneity, which probably results in specialized functions that can adapt protein degradation pathways to changing conditions in the cell. One of today’s main challenges is to understand how different proteasome subtypes influence its proteolytic activity and the cell function.
The proteasome has been intensely studied from a structural and functional point of view since its discovery in 198820. Electron microscopy (EM) allowed to observe the 20S in complex with different regulators21,22,23,24,25,26 together with certain catalytic intermediate-states of the 26S27. Covalent cross-linking coupled to mass spectrometry (MS) helped refining 26S structures28,29 and generating structural models involving different partners, including the 19S23, Ecm2915, Ubp630, and other PIPs15. X-ray crystallography also provided high-resolution structures of proteasomes alone or in the presence of covalent inhibitors31, regulators32,33, and complexes of proteasome with their associated regulators15,31,32.
The complex size is obviously a limit for its analysis by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR). However, the structure of the eukaryotic proteasome from Thermoplasma acidophilum, containing only one type of subunit α and β, has been resolved. It showed evidence of a remodelling of the catalytic sites located in the center of the proteasome upon binding of a regulatory particle on its surface, which can be described as an outer-to-inner allosteric change34. A reverse inner-to-outer change was also observed at the binding interface when modifying the catalytic site, but this was not confirmed by the comparison of the std20S X-ray structure35 with the recent i20S X-ray36 and cryo-EM37 structures (RMSD = 0.392 and 0.480 Å, respectively). However, the outer-to-inner mechanism was recently shown in the human 20S cryo-EM structure upon PA200 binding25: conformational changes were found not only at the binding interface (opening of the pore), but also down to the catalytic sites.
Despite these achievements, high-resolution methods are still limited by either the size, the heterogeneity, or the dynamics of the purified complexes. This is evidenced by the small number of structures of the 20S bound to regulators and their numerous unresolved regions.
Here, we optimized the emerging method Hydrogen-Deuterium eXchange coupled to MS (HDX-MS) to investigate conformational changes occurring upon binding of the std/i20S to PA28 regulators. This method, developed in the 90 s, enables the detection of conformational differences between two protein samples. Briefly, the proteins or protein complexes of interest are diluted in a deuterated buffer and hydrogen atoms from the peptide bonds are exchanged with the deuterium atoms of the solution. The rate of exchange of each amide hydrogen depends on its solvent accessibility and involvement in the stabilization of secondary structures: regions that are relatively more solvent-accessible or flexible present a higher deuteration rate than the ones that are hidden in the core of the protein or rigid. This expanding method can thus be used to study protein dynamics38, compare protein conformations (in different buffer conditions, after mutation, ligand binding)39, or to identify protein–protein or protein–ligand binding interfaces40,41. We present the HDX-MS analysis of the entire human std and i20S core particles as well as their PA28αβ and PA28γ regulators, mapping solvent accessibility/dynamics for each complex. The conformational maps of the std and i20S present significant differences, and their differential analysis with and without regulators provide a molecular rationale for their distinct functions. Our data provide evidence for the human 20S inner-to-outer allosteric change upon incorporation of the immuno-subunits and the reverse outer-to-inner transduction signal upon PA28 binding, illustrating the interplay between the different proteasome regulation pathways. Altogether, this work highlights the potential of HDX-MS to generate low resolution but informative structural information on large hetero-oligomeric complexes. It opens the door to many other applications, including identifying PIPs binding surfaces and the stabilizing/destabilizing effects of other regulators of the 20S activity, including small molecules.
Results
Dynamic interfaces uniting the four rings of the 20S proteasome
HDX consists in the exchange of backbone amide hydrogens (H) with deuteriums (D) in proteins in solution. The exchange rate depends on the solvent accessibility and/or the flexibility of a given region, thereby providing low resolution but crucial information on protein conformation. We performed two distinct analyses (Fig. 1a): (i) identification of the most accessible and/or dynamic regions of the proteins in solution, and (ii) differential analysis of each protein alone or in complex. We monitored the incorporation of deuterium for each sample from 0 to 30 min in triplicate experiments (Fig. 1b). For differential analyses, we compared the peptide relative deuterium uptakes (RDU) of the proteins alone vs. in presence of their binding partner. The peptides were considered significantly different when they presented a P value of the ANOVA ≤ 0.01 after correction for multiple testing (Benjamini–Hochberg) and three successive time points with an absolute difference between the two conditions >4 times the experimental standard deviation observed in the dataset (Fig. 1c) (see Methods for more detailed information). The peptide-level RDUs or differences of RDU were mapped to the protein sequences as described in Fig. 1d: when several peptides covered the same region of a protein we kept only the RDU (or difference of RDU) of the shortest one. Finally, we mapped the RDUs to the protein 3D structures in order to visualize the regions the most accessible to solvent (Fig. 1e, left panel), or presenting significant differences of deuteration (Fig. 1e, right panel). For differential analysis, we colored the 3D structures with the sum of RDU differences between the two conditions (the values per timepoint are available in Supplementary Data 1–3). In this context, modification of solvent accessibility upon complex formation can be due to the presence of a binding interface or to allosteric changes. This approach was employed to identify the conformational differences between the std20S and i20S, and to compare their structural changes upon binding to PA28αβ or PA28γ. For this, we purchased commercial i20S purified from human spleen previously used for in vitro proteolytic assays42,43,44.
We obtained 89% subunit sequence coverage on average for the 17 subunits of the std/i20S (Supplementary Fig. 1, Supplementary Data 4 and 5, Supplementary Table 1). HDX-MS results were mapped on the 3D structure of the human std20S (PDB: 5LE5, Fig. 2a, b). As expected, we found a faster and higher deuteration of the solvent-facing α-ring interface of the std20S compared to any other ring interfaces (Fig. 2c). This observation benchmarks our approach by confirming that high RDUs directly indicate regions of the proteasome that are more dynamic and potentially accessible for interaction with regulators or PIPs. The N-terminal (N-ter) part of the α-subunits constituting the α-ring were highly deuterated (2–22 in α1, 2–20 in α2, 14–18 in α3, 2–8 in α4, 4–13 in α5, 2–9 in α6, and 2–11 in α7, Fig. 2c). These N-ter are located around the proteasome pore entry, and their high RDU strongly supports the hypothesis of a flexible pore entrance in the std20S that fluctuates between open and closed states45,46,47. Furthermore, the α-ring presented very dynamic patches consisting of non-contiguous peptides from the same subunit in α3 (176–186/238–261), α4 (44–54/197–206), and α5 (49–63/167–181) (Fig. 2c). These may interact with many different PIPs. Our analysis also identified dynamic patches at the interface between different subunits like α1 (2–22/165–178) and α2 (194–202), α3 (14–18) and α4 (44–54), and α5 (167–181) and α6 (48–56) that correspond to the 1–2, 3–4, and 5–6 α-pockets48 (Fig. 2c, circled in white) known to accommodate the C-terminal (C-ter) tails of Rpt3, Rpt2, and Rpt5, respectively23,48. We also identified flexible patches on the interface of the α-ring facing the β-ring, where amino-acid stretches of α1 (146–152), α4 (91–102), α5 (102–107), and α7 (140–148) were slightly more flexible than the remaining of the interface (Fig. 2d and Supplementary Data 3, 6).
The β-ring was globally less deuterated than the α-ring (Fig. 2e, f), which was expected since it does not present a large solvent interface. However, after 30 min, some α-facing bulges were moderately deuterated in all β subunits but β7: these include the loops between α-helices 1 and 2 of β1 (66–82), β2 (67–79), β3 (75–87), β4 (68–79), β5 (67–77), and β6 (74–91) (red circles in Fig. 2e, and Supplementary Data 6). Interestingly, some of these dynamic loops face the highly deuterated regions of the α-ring described above and define flexible regions of the α-ring/β-ring interface. The most dynamic regions of the β-ring were located on its outer surface and were constituted of the C-ter of β1 (178–203), β2 (186–234), β4 (195–201), β5 (185–204), β6 (151–168), and β7 (200–214) (Fig. 2f in red and Supplementary Data 6). These regions are particularly interesting since they can potentially interact with the numerous PIPs described in the literature.
An inner-to-outer conformational change upon substitution of standard to immuno-subunits
Although mouse i20S and std20S possess very similar β2 and β2i substrate binding channels, there are structural differences between their standard and immuno-catalytic subunits β1 and β5. The S1 and S3 substrate pockets are smaller in β1i vs. β1, β5i possesses smaller S2 and S3 pockets, and the S1 pocket is larger in β5i than in β531. However, very little structural difference is found between the α and noncatalytic β subunits of the i20S and std20S (Root-Mean Square Deviation of the Cα < 0.72 Å). The same is true when comparing the recent structure of the human i20S36 with the std20S35 (RMSD of the Cα < 0.67 Å).
The std20S catalytic chamber—localized at the β-ring/β-ring interface—was locally very flexible in our data (Fig. 2f and Fig. 3). The residues forming the S1 and S2 pockets31 of β1 were highly deuterated, together with the T23 of the S3 pocket (Fig. 3b, see Supplementary Data 4 for full kinetics). The catalytic residues of β2 were poorly deuterated compared to the remainder of this subunit (Fig. 3c), with the exception of 45–53 constituting its S1 and S2 pockets. Conversely, most of the residues forming β5 catalytic site and substrate pockets were highly deuterated (Fig. 3d). The relatively poor sequence coverage that we obtained for β2i limits its analysis and we cannot comment on the accessibility of its S1, S2, and S3 pockets (Fig. 3b and Supplementary Table 1). The direct comparison of RDUs between the standard and immuno-catalytic subunits (β1/β1i, β2/β2i, and β5/β5i) was not possible due to their sequence differences. Nevertheless, we could acquire the deuteration profiles of the peptides ADSRATAGAY (16–25) of β5 and AVDSRASAGSY (15–25) of β5i that cover the same portion of the two subunits. Their difference of deuteration profiles indicate that these residues are more flexible in std20S than in the i20S (Fig. 3d and Supplementary Data 4).
Allosteric differences beyond the catalytic subunits were shown in the prokaryotic std and i20S analysed by NMR34. These were not observed in mouse crystallographic structures31, may be due to crystal packing. In order to confirm or infirm this inner-to-outer allosteric change in human, we compared the RDUs of all the noncatalytic subunits of the i20S (Supplementary Data 4–6) with those of the std20S (as presented Fig. 1).
The introduction of immuno-catalytic subunits resulted in significant conformational changes on the noncatalytic 20S subunits. The results of our statistical analysis are presented in Fig. 4, and Supplementary Data 1, 4, 7–10. Overall, the noncatalytic β-ring subunits were more dynamic in the i20S than in the std20S, (>50 peptides significantly more deuterated, Fig. 4a–b in red, Supplementary Data 1, 7). The β-ring/β-ring interface and the channel were particularly more dynamic/accessible in the i20S vs. std20S (Fig. 4a/e and Supplementary Data 1), together with two α-facing bulges of β6 and β7 (Fig. 4b, red circles). Four β-facing bulges of α2/3/5/6 were also significantly more dynamic in the i20S vs. std20S (Fig. 4c, red circles, corrected P-values and RDU differences are available in Supplementary Data 9 and 10). The pore entrance on the α-ring solvent-accessible surface (α subunits N-ter) was significantly more dynamic/accessible upon replacement of β1/2/5 by the immuno-subunits (Fig. 4d red circles, Supplementary Data 1, 7). This suggests a long-range mechanism enabling the i20S pore to dwell longer in the open-state, and could explain its generally higher activity49 as well as the various regions from the antechambers that were more accessible in the i20S vs. std20S (98–99 in α2; 102–109 in α3; 128–142 in α5; 100–108 in α6; 95–105 in β3; 94–102 in β4, Fig. 4e, corrected P-values and RDU differences are available in Supplementary Data 9 and 10). Conversely, three solvent-facing regions of the α-ring were significantly more dynamic/accessible in the std20S than in the i20S (Fig. 4d in blue, Supplementary Data 4, 7). Since these constitute potential binding sites for the proteasome regulators, this could explain the preferential association of specific regulators to different 20S subtypes. Interestingly, these three subunits also contain regions that are more accessible in the std20S on the β-ring facing interface (Fig. 4c), suggesting that this dynamic behavior can be related to the presence of the standard catalytic subunits within the β-ring. More precisely, the α1 102–114 (corrected P value = 5.87.10−11, sum of difference = −12%) and 146–152 (corrected P value = 2.54.10−7, sum of difference = −12%), which were more deuterated in the std20S vs. i20S, are in direct contact with a portion of β2/β2i (69–72) also more accessible in the std20S (Supplementary Data 1). Altogether, these results confirm the inner-to-outer allosteric effect following incorporation of the immuno-β subunits that lead to α-ring remodeling: more dynamic pore entrance but protected external anchor regions (α3 C-ter).
The activation loop of PA28β is less dynamic/accessible than PA28α/γ’s
There is no structure yet for PA28γ but those of the human homoheptameric PA28α (nonphysiological) and murine heteroheptameric PA28α4β3 were resolved in 199732 and 201733, respectively. These monomers are composed of a four-helix bundle, assembled as a barrel-shaped heptamer (Fig. 5) that controls proteasome catalytic activity through a conserved activation loop50,51.
The structures of PA28α, PA28β, and PA28αβ miss a region of 15–31 residues bridging the α-helices 1 and 2, although they were present in the recombinant constructs (Fig. 5a–c and Supplementary Data 11 in red). These apical loops, most likely flexible, sit on top of the regulator and might thereby control the substrate access to the proteasome. The human PA28γ chain has a similar loop (43 residues), and no information on its structure has ever been reported. Since the sequence identity of human PA28γ is closer to PA28α (40%) than PA28β (35%) or Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) PA28 (34%) (Supplementary Table 2), we generated a homology model of human PA28γ (Fig. 5e) using the structure of human PA28α33 as a template with the SWISS-MODEL server52. The sequence of Pf is used as a comparison here because it is part of the very few structures of PA28 regulator homologues available in the PDB with close homology to PA28γ and whose structure was recently solved in complex with the 20S24.
The sequence coverages obtained upon digestion were above 90% for all three PA28 subunits across all conditions (Supplementary Fig. 1, Supplementary Data 11, 12 and Supplementary Table 1). Their deuteration pattern revealed similar dynamics for both PA28αβ and PA28γ with a very strong protection of most residues inside the channel (Fig. 5d, e and Supplementary Data 11). The missing apical loops (Supplementary Data 11, red rectangles) were very quickly deuterated, a sign of high accessibility/flexibility, that could explain their absence in known structures. The proteasome-facing interface (unstructured N- and C-termini and activation loops) (Fig. 5d, e, right) and the entrance of the channel (Fig. 5d, e, left) were also strongly deuterated. Remarkably, the regions involved in the binding (C-ter) and activation of the proteasome were very accessible/dynamic when both regulators were alone in solution. However, the activation loop was less deuterated in PA28β. The reason why eukaryoric homoheptameric PA28 regulators have evolved towards more complex heteroheptameric PA28αβ is not well understood. Given the overall similar tridimensional structures of PA28αβ and PA28γ, the poorer flexibility observed on PA28β activation loop could, at least partially, explain their different functions.
Allosteric changes between PA28γ and PA28αβ upon 20S binding
Before comparing the PA28 regulators alone and in complex with the std20S, we confirmed their ability to increase the proteasome activity in vitro. In our hands, a 2-fold molar excess of any of the PA28 regulators doubled the std20S chymotrypsin-like activity (P value of a paired two-sided t-test: 0.0007 and 0.0013 for PA28γ and PA28αβ, respectively; Supplementary Fig. 2 and Supplementary Table 3). As expected, the PA28 proteasome-facing interfaces were highly protected in the complex compared to the regulators alone (Fig. 6a, b right, in blue; Supplementary Data 2, 12, and 13). The activation loops, located at the 20S binding interface, and known to interact with the N-ter of the 20S α subunits to open its central pore, were highly dynamic/accessible in both PA28 analyzed alone (Fig. 5d, e right, and Supplementary Data 11 and 12). Our data show that PA28αβ/std20S binding strongly protected the activation loops as well as their neighboring residues (136–147, 153–159, and 232–249 in PA28α; 123–135, 140–145 in PA28β, Fig. 6a and Supplementary Data 2, 13, corrected P values and RDU differences are available in Supplementary Data 9–10). The protection of PA28γ activation loop (region 146–152) upon std20S binding was also statistically significant but notably less pronounced (corrected P value = 1.49.10−8, sum of difference = −20%) (Fig. 6b and Supplementary Data 9, 10).
Interestingly, other regions were less dynamic/accessible upon complex formation. The kinks of the first α-helix of PA28α (25–32; corrected P value = 2.93.10−15, sum of difference = −61%) and PA28γ (35–40; corrected P value = 6.55.10−13, sum of difference = −30%) (Fig. 5a and Fig. 6a, b, red ovals) were strongly protected upon std20S binding. The PA28β N-ter (5–16) that faces PA28α’s kink, was also significantly protected upon std20S interaction (corrected P value = 9.19.10−8, sum of difference = −30%) (Supplementary Data 2). We thus hypothesize that PA28α/PA28β interaction might be strengthened and/or structurally rearranged upon binding to the std20S. The N-ter (6–10) of PA28γ facing the kink was slightly but not significantly protected (corrected P value = 3.77.10−3, sum of difference = −6.4%) (Fig. 6b and Supplementary Data 2).
The opposite side of the heptamer was also partially protected upon std20S binding: the loops between helices 3 and 4 of PA28α (179–197), PA28β (166–184), and PA28γ (203–208) (Fig. 6a, b) as well as the flexible loop (60–101) of PA28γ (Fig. 5b). These regions include the constriction sites at the top of PA28αβ (K187 and K190 in PA28α, K177 and K180 in PA28β) that were significantly protected upon std20S binding (Fig. 6a and Supplementary Data 2). In PA28γ, another constriction site, located underneath was protected upon std20S binding (R181, Fig. 6b and Supplementary Data 2).
We then compared the impact of std20S vs. i20S binding on PA28 solvent accessibility using the statistical strategy presented in Fig. 1c (comparison referred to as PA28 + std20S vs. PA28 + i20S in Supplementary Data 2, 9, 10). Most of the reduction in accessibility/flexibility that was observed on the PA28 chains upon binding to the std20S were dampened upon interaction with the i20S (Fig. 6c, d and Supplementary Data 2).
A PA28-driven outer-to-inner allosteric change of the 20S proteasome
Atomic force spectroscopy showed that the 20S can alternate between open and closed states, possibly through allosteric regulation45,46. Our data indicate that PA28αβ and PA28γ do not present the same conformational rearrangements upon binding to the 20S, so they might allosterically affect the 20S pore entrance and/or its catalytic sites in a regulator-specific outer-to-inner mechanism, as suggested recently25.
We compared the std/i20S RDUs in presence or absence of PA28αβ or PA28γ (Fig. 7, Supplementary Data 3, 14, and 15). Strikingly, very few regions of the α-ring in contact with the regulators were significantly protected in the std20S upon interaction with PA28αβ or PA28γ, and none in the i20S. The same C-ter region of α3 (238–261) that was found to be more accessible in the std20S vs. i20S (corrected P value = 1.55.10−7, sum of difference = −24%) (Fig. 4d) was protected in the std20S upon interaction with PA28αβ (corrected P value = 1.62.10−5, sum of difference = −28%), and to a lesser extent with PA28γ (corrected P value = 2.85.10−4, sum of difference = −16%) (Fig. 7a, f, red circle on α3). Other regions of the std20S that were protected when binding PA28αβ form two patches on the same solvent-exposed interface (Fig. 7a, red circles on α4, α5). These could be the main anchorage sites of PA28αβ at the surface of the std20S. The remainder of the std20S solvent-exposed surface was globally more dynamic upon PA28αβ binding, especially near the pore entrance (N-ter of α1/2/3/4/5/7), which can be interpreted as an opening of the pore (Fig. 7a, large red circle). Another external patch at the α1/α2 interface was also more dynamic upon binding of PA28αβ (Fig. 7a, red circle on α1, α2).
On the β-facing α-ring, PA28αβ binding mainly destabilized α2 (136–145: corrected P value = 2.48.10−5, sum of difference = 10%) and the α5 bulge (102–107: corrected P value = 1.56.10−5, sum of difference = 19%) (Fig. 7b, red circles on α2, α5). Interestingly, this bulge faces the 109–135 β6 stretch encompassing 4 peptides more deuterated upon PA28αβ binding and is in close vicinity to the β5 interface, which is also more dynamic (Fig. 7c, red circles on β5, β6, corrected P values and RDU differences are available in Supplementary Data 9–10). Although not close enough to make hydrogen bonds, α2 (136–145) (Fig. 7b, red circle on α2) faces the β2/β3 interface that was more flexible/accessible upon PA28αβ binding, especially in the 186–202 C-ter region of β2 extending towards β3 (Fig. 7d, circle on β2). The only peptides of the β-ring that were less dynamic upon PA28αβ binding are located on β1 (Fig. 7c, red circle on β1).
We compared the effect of PA28αβ binding to the std20S (Fig. 7a–e) with the other conditions (Fig. 7f–t). Although the destabilization of the α-ring N-ter by PA28αβ was almost complete in the std20S (except α6) (Fig. 7a, large red circle), it was restricted to α2/3/7 in the i20S (Fig. 7k, large red circle), suggesting a partial opening of the pore. Binding of PA28γ did not affect any of the std20S α subunit N-ter (Fig. 7f) and only the i20S α2 and α7 N-ter (Fig. 7p, large red circle), indicating less PA28γ-driven opening of the std20S than the i20S pore.
Overall, PA28 binding to the std/i20S increased their RDU, especially at the pore entrance, at the α1/α2 interface (Fig. 7a, k, p, red circles on α1, α2), and the β2/β2i C-ter arm extending towards β3 (Fig. 7d, e, n, o, s, t). Despite these similarities, our data show subtle proteasome- as well as regulator-specific - differences in the allosteric motion triggered upon complex formation, as suggested recently25. The std20S α3 C-ter was protected upon binding of PA28αβ and PA28γ (Fig. 7a, f). This seemed to induce the PA28γ-specific destabilization of α2 (101–119: corrected P value = 4.03.10−5, sum of difference = 13%, Fig. 7g, red circle on α2), β3 (74–86: corrected P value = 1.19.10−6, sum of difference = 14%), and β1 (64–70: corrected P value = 8.72.10−4, sum of difference = 10%) bulges (Fig. 7h, red circles on β1, β3), down to the outer β-ring/β-ring interface of β1 (178–205), β6 (151–159: corrected P value = 1.40.10−7, sum of difference = 13%) and β7 (152–167) (Fig. 7i, red circles on β1, β6, β7; see Supplementary Data 8 for the corrected P values and RDU differences corresponding to the protein portions covered with multiple peptides). According to our statistical thresholds, the α3 C-ter protection upon PA28 binding was std20S-specific (Fig. 7k, p), but the remodeling of the α-ring occurred in both 20S (although differently) and was propagated to the β-ring of the i20S via α1/β3/β5i and α4/β3/β5i bulges for PA28αβ (Fig. 7l, m, red circles on α1/β3/β5i) and PA28γ, respectively (Fig. 7q, r, red circles on α4/β3/β5i). It resulted in remodeling of the β-ring/β-ring interface eventually affecting β1i/2i/7 or β1i/2i/5i/6/7 with PA28αβ (Fig. 7n, red circles on β1i/2i/7) and PA28γ (Fig. 7s, red circles on β1i/2i/5i/6/7), respectively.
The limited sequence coverage around the catalytic sites prevented us from drawing exhaustive conclusions on the differential impact of regulator/20S complex formation on the proteasome active sites. However, β1 (10–25) (corrected P value = 9.49.10−9, sum of difference = 22%), β2 (16–42) (corrected P value = 9.54.10−5, sum of difference = 5.2%) and β5 (29–36) (corrected P value = 8.84.10−3, sum of difference = 8%) active sites were partially but significantly more dynamic/accessible upon PA28αβ binding (Fig. 7d, orange circles and Supplementary Data 3 and 14), in-line with an increased proteolytic activity. Binding of PA28αβ also increased the solvent accessibility of β1i active site (10–17) (corrected P value = 3.89.10−3, sum of difference = 14%) (Supplementary Data 3 and 14), which is in good agreement with previous work showing that the caspase-like activity of the i20S is enhanced to a higher extent by PA28αβ than PA28γ53. PA28γ was reported to have little or no effect on the i20S44, whereas it is known to increase all three std20S activities54. Our data do not indicate any major change in the std20S active site solvent accessibility upon interaction with the regulator (Fig. 7i). However, it revealed a significant decrease of β2i N-ter (2–6) (corrected P value = 3.80.10−3, sum of difference = −13%) solvent accessibility upon PA28γ interaction (Supplementary Data 3). Thus, the catalytic activation observed upon PA28γ/std20S binding may be driven by changes occurring further away from the active sites.
Discussion
This structural dataset on the human i20S compared to the std20S alone or bound to both PA28 regulators rationalizes from a mechanistic point of view previous observations that replacement49, modification34 or ligand binding49,55 to the catalytic subunits can allosterically modify the 20S core particle structure and alter its binding to potential PIPs. A main advantage of HDX-MS is that it provides information on very flexible loops, unlike X-ray crystallography or cryo-EM. Also, it is not theoretically limited by the complex size since the proteins are digested into peptides after deuteration: it can be applied to very small proteins (unlike cryo-EM) or very large complexes (unlike NMR). Large oligomeric complexes containing a reduced number of different monomers (limited number of chemical shifts) have already been analyzed by NMR, such as the prokaryotic 20S from T. acidophilum constituted of 14 identical α and 14 identical β subunits34. With the recent exception of the DNA-PKc analysis56 (469 kDa monomer), HDX-MS is usually performed either on rather small and simple systems39 or on homo-oligomeric complexes38,57, due to some technical limitations in protein digestion, peptide separation and data analysis. In comparison, our study encompasses 16 different ~25 kDa monomers. Despite this analytical challenge, we obtained an average sequence coverage per subunit of 89% for the 20S alone and 81% when in complex with PA28 regulators. It is important to note that, except for a few specific cases58,59, HDX-MS does not inform on the presence of multiple conformational states in solution since it is based on the measured average of their RDUs. Other approaches such as cryo-EM-based classification would be needed to better characterise intermediate or minor states. Nevertheless, comparing the same sample (like std20S) in presence or absence of regulator and performing thorough statistical analysis identified a wealth of information on the proteasome dynamics, binding interfaces and allosteric changes upon incorporation of the immuno-subunits or activation by PA28 regulators (Fig. 8).
These conformational maps revealed the subtle rearrangement of the std/i20S α3 C-ter. More precisely, the residues 238–261 were less dynamic/accessible upon incorporation of the immuno-catalytic subunits (in blue Fig. 8a). The principal component analysis of the 20S high-resolution structures available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) in 2014 (46 structures from yeast, 4 murine and 1 bovine) revealed that the 220–230 stretch of the mouse std20S and i20S α3 clustered with the yeast apo and peptide-bound forms, respectively49. We believe that the allosteric change occurring on α3 C-ter upon ligand binding to β5 in the yeast 20S could be similar to the change in solvent accessibility/dynamics observed between the std20S and the i20S conformational maps. The highly charged C-ter of α3 points towards the outer surface of the α-ring and has also been suggested to be the Insulin-Degrading-Enzyme binding site60. It could be involved in the binding of PA28αβ/γ to the std20S, or in its subsequent activation. Interestingly, the very end of α3 C-ter is absent from most human 20S proteasome structures, which confirms its high flexibility but also impedes any modeling of 20S/PA28 interaction. Unfortunately, this protruding C-ter α helix is not present in the cryo-EM structure of the Pf 20S bound to its PA28 regulator, since it is nine residues shorter than its human counterpart36. It could be characteristic of more evolved 20S proteasomes and tune their binding with different regulators.
As commented before, the differential analysis of the catalytic subunits is impossible due to their sequence differences (the peptides resulting from the pepsin digestion are different). The comparison of their deuteration profiles was further hindered by the limited sequence coverage of the i20S. This was partly due to the presence of residual traces of std20S present in this sample61. Nevertheless, it was possible to compare the RDUs of the noncatalytic subunits of the two core particles. The central pore of the 20S was more flexible in the i20S vs. std20S (Fig. 4d and in red Fig. 8a), as was the β-facing interface of the α-ring, especially α5 that directly faces the β5 (std20S) or β5i (i20S) catalytic subunit (Fig. 4c). We propose that the conformational differences observed between the standard and immuno-α3 C-ter (red arrows Fig. 8a) could be transduced from the inner β-ring to the outer α-ring via α5.
Interestingly, upon binding of any regulator to the 20S, we observed a similar destabilization of the α5 region that faces β5/5i, suggesting that the exact opposite mechanism (from the outer α-ring to the inner β-ring) can also take place upon 20S/PA28 interaction, as suggested earlier34.
Overall, our data indicate a general mechanism of PA28 activation by the 20S core proteasome. More precisely, the interaction of PA28 activation loops and C-ter with the 20S seems to trigger a long-range allosteric change at the top of the regulator (loops between helices 1/2 and/or 3/4) via a rearrangement of the N-ter kink of PA28α and PA28γ (Fig. 8b). Although present in the three PA28 subtypes, the activation loop protection was stronger in PA28α and PA28γ vs. PA28β; most probably explaining why “the affinity of the proteasome towards the PA28αβ complex is about two orders of magnitude higher than towards the homomeric PA28α and PA28β complexes”62. Indeed, several studies showed that both PA28α and PA28β were required for an optimum activation of the 20S by PA28αβ32,33.
We also provide crucial information on the loops located between helices 1/2, missing in every PA28 high-resolution structure or model. Since these are located at the entrance/exit of the activator, any change in their flexibility could modify the nature of both substrates and/or products of the proteasome complex. Indeed, it has been shown in PA28α to constrain substrates within the catalytic chamber of the core particle, thereby generating shorter peptides63. We show that these flexible loops, together with PA28 constriction sites (conserved lysine between alpha helices 3 and 4) are allosterically stabilized upon binding of the std20S but not the i20S (Fig. 8c). This could explain how the binding of different PA28 to different 20S subtypes alters the length/nature of the generated peptides. Our data also suggest that PA28 might modify the 20S products by inducing conformational changes in the proteasomal active sites. Indeed, our results show distinctive changes in dynamics detected down to the β-ring and around the catalytic site and/or substrate pockets upon regulator binding (Fig. 8c).
We observed a stronger protection of PA28αβ than PA28γ upon std20S binding (Fig. 6 and Fig. 8c). Globally, both PA28 were more protected upon interaction with the std20S than with the i20S (Fig. 8c and Supplementary Data 2 and 13), suggesting a stronger interaction of the regulators with the std20S than the i20S (Supplementary Data 2). This was mirrored by regions on the i20S α-ring that were less protected than in the std20S upon incubation with both PA28, whereas previous studies showed that PA28αβ interaction was stronger with the i20S than with the std20S64 or equivalent21. In this context, we think that protection to deuteration cannot be always correlated to relative binding affinities. The very limited decrease of RDU on the α-ring interface interacting with PA28 regulators can be explained by the resulting gate opening (RDU increase) known to induce its increased proteolytic activity. Gate opening and binding interface protection are expected to have opposite impacts on RDU, so their combination in the same protein region would result in no significant changes of deuteration rates. We showed that both PA28 regulators activate the chymotrypsin-like activity of the std20S to a similar extent in our in vitro assay (Supplementary Fig. 2). However, the N-ter portions of the std20S α subunits (entrance of the channel) were significantly more deuterated when interacting with PA28αβ whereas this increase was not significant with PA28γ (Fig. 7a, f and Supplementary Data 3), suggesting that their allosteric mechanisms of activation are different. This could alternatively be explained by a shorter dwell-time at the surface of the std20S or by differences in binding stoichiometry. More experiments are needed to fully understand these allosteric mechanisms of activation.
Although not similarly distributed, a global core proteasome destabilization upon complex formation was found in all four conditions tested (Fig. 7), so we focused on the comparison of the most affected regions. We observed that each pair of PA28/20S complex underwent long-range conformational rearrangements in specific regions, as suggested recently25. Different sets of α N-ter were destabilized depending on the PA28/20S pair (in red Fig. 8c), suggesting a gradual interaction-specific opening of the central pore, in-line with a recent cryo-EM structure that showed a partial opening of the bovine i20S gate in complex with human PA28αβ65. The β2 C-ter extending towards β3 was destabilized in all the conditions, except std20S/PA28γ. On the contrary, the region just before the α3 C-ter (217–236) was protected upon PA28 binding in all cases, except std20S/PA28αβ. Interestingly, this stretch is close to β3 74–86, which was also protected in all conditions tested except std20S/PA28αβ. These observations could provide a basis to understand how regulator binding propagates from the α- to the β-ring depending on the activator/20S pair.
Altogether, these data provide a unique resource informing on the allosteric activation of the 20S proteasome complexes that should soon be completed by upcoming structural and functional studies. We think that HDX-MS could be applied to characterize, not only the binding sites of many new proteasome inhibitors, but also to identify their potential allosteric effects on the 20S core complex. The same is true for the many PIPs that regulate proteasome function and are still poorly characterized from a structural point of view66. More broadly, this work demonstrates the ability of HDX-MS to investigate dynamic events on megadalton assemblies including ribosomal particles, inflammasomes, and nucleosomes, to name a few.
Methods
Reagents
Unless stated otherwise, all reagents were purchased from Sigma–Aldrich. The std20S (BML-PW8720–0050), i20S (BML-PW9645-0050), PA28γ (BML-PW9875-0100), and PA28αβ (BML-PW9420-0025) were purchased from Enzo Life Science. Deuterium oxide (D215H) and sodium deuteroxide (D076Y) solutions were from Euriso-top and deuterium chloride (543047-50 G) was from Sigma–Aldrich. The fluorogenic peptide substrate (4011369.0025) for proteasome activity measurement was from Bachem.
Proteasome activity test
The assay was performed in black 96-well plates (Fluotrac 200—GREINER BIO-ONE). 5 μL of each sample (corresponding to 50 ng of 20S and/or 28 ng of PA28) were added in three independent experiments to 45 μL of Tris-HCl 100 mM pH 8 and 50 μL of Suc-LLVY-AMC (for chymotrypsin-like activity) substrate in 200 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8 at a final concentration of 400 μM/well. The kinetic assays were performed at 37 °C in a FLX-800 spectrofluorimeter (BIOTEK, Winooski, VT, U.S.A.) over 90 min with one reading every 5 min, at 360 nm for excitation and 460 nm for emission. Each proteasome specific activity was obtained by dividing the activity by the proteasome quantity (50 ng). A two-sided t-test was used between the std20S alone and in presence of PA28.
Development of a HDX-MS pipeline dedicated to the comparative analysis of 20S proteasome/regulator complexes
In a classical HDX-MS workflow, the proteins of interest are digested online and the generated peptides are separated on a reverse phase column before MS analysis to monitor deuterium incorporation rates. The main challenges encountered when analysing heterogeneous complexes such as the proteasome by HDX-MS are threefold. First, the high number of peptides generated after digestion entailed specific optimization of their chromatographic separation. Second, we optimized the quenching step and injection parameters to reduce dead volumes, as well as the acquisition method, in order to handle samples at low concentration (<1 µM). Finally, we developed a computational pipeline dedicated to the multidimensional analysis of HDX-MS analysis of large complexes. The resulting data were mapped to available 3D structures using our recently developed open-source web application HDX-Viewer v.1.267.
Automated Hydrogen-Deuterium eXchange coupled to Mass Spectrometry (HDX-MS)
HDX-MS experiments were performed on a Synapt-G2Si (Waters Scientific, Manchester, UK) coupled to a Twin HTS PAL dispensing and labelling robot (LEAP Technologies, Carborro, NC, USA) via a NanoAcquity system with HDX technology (Waters, Manchester, UK). Data were collected with MassLynX v.4.1 from Waters Scientific (Manchester, UK) and the robot was controlled via HDx Director v.1.0.3.9 (LEAP Technologies, Carborro, NC, USA). Each step was optimized to minimize sample loss and work with such a heterogeneous and diluted sample:
Method in HDxDirector: The method recommended by Waters (HDX System Suitability Test) injects only 25% of the sample that is aspirated from the protein vial. In order to reduce sample loss, we (1) used a sample loop of 100 µl instead of 50 µl, (2) carefully reduced all the dead volumes, and (3) used 500 mM glycine pH 2.3 instead of 50 mM K2HPO4, 50 mM KH2PO4, pH 2.3 in order to optimize the ratio of quenching volume (10% instead of 50%). With this workflow, we increased by more than threefold the amount of starting material injected (79%). 20S proteasomes were incubated alone or with a 2-fold molar excess of PA28, with final concentrations of 0.4 and 0.8 µM, respectively. 5.7 µL of protein were aspirated and 5.2 µL were diluted in 98.8 µL of protonated (peptide mapping) or deuterated buffer (20 mM Tris pH/pD 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT) and incubated at 20 °C for 0, 0.5, 1, 5, 10, and 30 min. The final D2O percentage was 95% in the labelled samples. 99 µL were then transferred to vials containing 11 µL of precooled quenching solution (500 mM glycine at pH 2.3). For experiments involving PA28αβ, the quenching buffer was supplemented with 250 mM tris-(2-carboxyethyl) phosphine (TCEP) in order to reduce the disulphide bridge between Cys21 of chain α and Cys3 of chain β. After 30 s. of quenching, 105 µL were injected into a 100 µL loop. Proteins were digested online with a 2.1 × 30 mm Poros Immobilized Pepsin column (Life Technologies/Applied Biosystems, Carlsbad, CA, USA). The temperature of the digestion room was set at 15 °C.
Chromatographic run: In order to cope with the unusual sample heterogeneity, the runtime of the chromatographic separation (12 min) was doubled compared to the one used for smaller protein complexes (6 min). Peptides were desalted for 3 min on a C18 pre-column (Acquity UPLC BEH 1.7 µm, VANGUARD) and separated on a C18 column (Acquity UPLC BEH 1.7 µm, 1.0 × 100 mm) by the following gradient: 5–35% buffer B (100% acetonitrile, 0.2% formic acid) for 12 min, 35–40% for 1 min, 40–95% for 1 min, 2 min at 95% followed by 2 cycles of 5–95% for 2 min and a final equilibration at 5% buffer A (5% acetonitrile, 0.2% formic acid) for 2 min. The total runtime was 25 min. The temperature of the chromatographic module was set at 4 °C. Experiments were run in triplicates and the protonated buffer was injected between each triplicate to wash the column and avoid cross-over contamination.
MS acquisition: The acquisitions were performed in positive and resolution mode in the m/z range 50–2000 Th. The sample cone and capillary voltages were set at 30 and 3 kV, respectively. The analysis cycles for nondeuterated samples alternated between a 0.3 s low energy scan (Trap and Transfer collision energies set to 4 V and 2 V, respectively), a 0.3 sec high energy scan (Ramp Trap and Transfer collision energies set to 18 to 40 V and 2 to 2 V, respectively) and a 0.3 sec lockspray scan (0.1 µM [Glu1]-Fibrinopeptide in 50% acetonitrile, 50% water and 0.2% formic acid infused at 10 µL/min). The lockspray trap collision energy was set at 32 V and a GFP scan of 0.3 sec is acquired every min. In order to double the signal intensity of deuterated peptides, deuterated samples were acquired only with the low energy and lockspray functions.
Data analysis: Peptide identification was performed with ProteinLynx Global SERVER v.3.0.2 (PLGS, Waters, Manchester, UK) based on the MSE data acquired on the nondeuterated samples. The MSMS spectra were searched against a home-made database containing sequences from the 17 std20S and i20S subunits, PA28α, PA28β, PA28γ, and pepsin from Sus scrofa. Peptides were filtered in DynamX v.3.0 from Waters Scientific (Manchester, UK) with the following parameters: peptides identified in at least two replicates, 0.2 fragments per amino-acid, intensity threshold 1000. The quantitative analysis of deuteration kinetics was performed using the statistical package R (R Development Core Team, 2012; http://www.R-project.org/) on the corresponding MS intensities. The deuterium uptakes of each ion for each timepoint were calculated based on the theoretical maximum, considering that all amino-acids (except proline residues and the first amino-acid or each peptide) were deuterated, and then averaged (weight = intensity) to get a value of relative deuterium uptake (RDU) per peptide sequence/condition/timepoint (see Supplementary Data 4, 5, 12, 14, 16). The RDUs were not corrected for back exchange. To identify the protein regions that presented conformational changes in complex vs. alone, we performed an ANOVA (Anova(), type = III, singular.ok = T) followed by Benjamini–Hochberg correction of the P value on all quantified peptides. For each comparison, we considered significantly regulated the peptides with a corrected P value ≤ 0.01 and an absolute difference of RDU above 1.57% (four times the mean absolute difference of RDU in the entire dataset) for three successive time points (Supplementary Data 9–10). The corresponding volcano plots are presented in Supplementary Data 3, 7, 13 and all the regions statistically regulated in all the differential HDX-MS analysis are listed in Supplementary Data 8. The RDU and differences of RDU (for protein alones or comparison between conditions, respectively) were consolidated (RDU mapping from peptide-level to protein sequence) using the values of the smallest peptide to increase the spatial resolution (see consolidation heatmaps in Supplementary Data 1–3, 6, 11). These data (per timepoint or sum of all time points) were then used for structural data mining with the recently developed open-source web application called HDX-Viewer [https://masstools.ipbs.fr/hdx-viewer]67 that allows to directly plot and visualize the whole dataset (14 different subunits per proteasome core particle) on the proteasome 3D structure. The scripts corresponding to the quality control and statistical analysis of this dataset are available at zenodo.org [https://zenodo.org] with the https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3769174 under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence. All molecular representations were generated in UCSF ChimeraX v.0.9 (2019–06–06)68.
Modeling: The PA28γ model was generated using the structure of human PA28α (PDB:1AV0) as a template with the SWISS-MODEL server52. This model misses the first 3 and the last 7 amino-acids, as well as the 64–106 stretch.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Code availability
The R scripts of the analysis, with the fasta files and output tables and cxc files are freely available at zenodo.org [https://zenodo.org] with the https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3769174 under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.
References
Collins, G. A. & Goldberg, A. L. The logic of the 26S proteasome. Cell 169, 792–806 (2017).
Bard, J. A. M. et al. Structure and function of the 26S proteasome. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 87, 697–724 (2018).
Groettrup, M., Kirk, C. J. & Basler, M. Proteasomes in immune cells: more than peptide producers? Nat. Rev. Immunol. 10, 73–78 (2010).
Aiken, C. T., Kaake, R. M., Wang, X. & Huang, L. Oxidative stress-mediated regulation of proteasome complexes. Mol. Cell. Proteomics https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M110.006924 (2011).
Boisvert, F.-M., Lam, Y. W., Lamont, D. & Lamond, A. I. A quantitative proteomics analysis of subcellular proteome localization and changes induced by DNA damage. Mol. Cell. Proteomics 9, 457–470 (2010).
Gomes, A. V. Genetics of proteasome diseases. Scientifica 2013, 637629 (2013).
Coux, O., Zieba, B. A. & Meiners, S. in Proteostasis and Disease: From Basic Mechanisms to Clinics (eds Barrio, R., Sutherland, J. D. & Rodriguez, M. S.) 55–100 (Springer International Publishing, 2020).
Basler, M., Mundt, S., Bitzer, A., Schmidt, C. & Groettrup, M. The immunoproteasome: a novel drug target for autoimmune diseases. Clin. Exp. Rheumatol. 33, S74–S79 (2015).
Moscovitz, O. et al. The Parkinson’s-associated protein DJ-1 regulates the 20S proteasome. Nat. Commun. 6, 6609 (2015).
Moscovitz, O. et al. A mutually inhibitory feedback loop between the 20S proteasome and its regulator, NQO1. Mol. Cell 47, 76–86 (2012).
Bousquet-Dubouch, M.-P. et al. Affinity purification strategy to capture human endogenous proteasome complexes diversity and to identify proteasome-interacting proteins. Mol. Cell. Proteom. 8, 1150–1164 (2009).
Le Tallec, B. et al. 20S proteasome assembly is orchestrated by two distinct pairs of chaperones in yeast and in mammals. Mol. Cell 27, 660–674 (2007).
Le Tallec, B., Barrault, M.-B., Guérois, R., Carré, T. & Peyroche, A. Hsm3/S5b participates in the assembly pathway of the 19S regulatory particle of the proteasome. Mol. Cell 33, 389–399 (2009).
Xie, Y. Structure, assembly and homeostatic regulation of the 26S proteasome. J. Mol. Cell Biol. 2, 308–317 (2010).
Wang, X. et al. The proteasome-interacting Ecm29 protein disassembles the 26S proteasome in response to oxidative stress. J. Biol. Chem. 292, 16310–16320 (2017).
Minis, A. et al. The proteasome regulator PI31 is required for protein homeostasis, synapse maintenance, and neuronal survival in mice. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 116, 24639–24650 (2019).
Bousquet-Dubouch, M. P., Fabre, B., Monsarrat, B. & Burlet-Schiltz, O. Proteomics to study the diversity and dynamics of proteasome complexes: from fundamentals to the clinic. Expert Rev. Proteomics 8, 459–481 (2011).
Weissman, A. M., Shabek, N. & Ciechanover, A. The predator becomes the prey: regulating the ubiquitin system by ubiquitylation and degradation. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 12, 605–620 (2011).
Claverol, S., Burlet-Schiltz, O., Girbal-Neuhauser, E., Gairin, J. E. & Monsarrat, B. Mapping and structural dissection of human 20 S proteasome using proteomic approaches. Mol. Cell. Proteomics 1, 567–578 (2002).
Arrigo, A.-P., Tanaka, K., Goldberg, A. L. & Welch, W. J. Identity of the 19S ‘prosome’ particle with the large multifunctional protease complex of mammalian cells (the proteasome). Nature 331, 192–194 (1988).
Cascio, P., Call, M., Petre, B. M., Walz, T. & Goldberg, A. L. Properties of the hybrid form of the 26S proteasome containing both 19S and PA28 complexes. EMBO J. 21, 2636–2645 (2002).
Ortega, J. et al. The axial channel of the 20S proteasome opens upon binding of the PA200 activator. J. Mol. Biol. 346, 1221–1227 (2005).
Huang, X., Luan, B., Wu, J. & Shi, Y. An atomic structure of the human 26S proteasome. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 23, 778–785 (2016).
Xie, S. C. et al. The structure of the PA28-20S proteasome complex from Plasmodium falciparum and implications for proteostasis. Nat. Microbiol. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-019-0524-4 (2019).
Toste Rêgo, A. & da Fonseca, P. C. A. Characterization of fully recombinant human 20S and 20S-PA200 proteasome complexes. Mol. Cell https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2019.07.014 (2019).
Guan, H. et al. Cryo-EM structures of the human PA200 and PA200-20S complex reveal regulation of proteasome gate opening and two PA200 apertures. PLoS Biol. 18, e3000654 (2020).
Schweitzer, A. et al. Structure of the human 26S proteasome at a resolution of 3.9 \AA. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 113, 7816–7821 (2016).
Wehmer, M. et al. Structural insights into the functional cycle of the ATPase module of the 26S proteasome. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 114, 1305–1310 (2017).
Beck, F. et al. Near-atomic resolution structural model of the yeast 26S proteasome. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, 14870–14875 (2012).
Aufderheide, A. et al. Structural characterization of the interaction of Ubp6 with the 26S proteasome. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 112, 8626–8631 (2015).
Huber, E. M. et al. Immuno- and constitutive proteasome crystal structures reveal differences in substrate and inhibitor specificity. Cell 148, 727–738 (2012).
Knowlton, J. R. et al. Structure of the proteasome activator REGalpha (PA28alpha). Nature 390, 639–644 (1997).
Huber, E. M. & Groll, M. The mammalian proteasome activator PA28 forms an asymmetric α4β3 complex. Structure 25, 1473–1480.e3 (2017).
Ruschak, A. M. & Kay, L. E. Proteasome allostery as a population shift between interchanging conformers. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, E3454–E3462 (2012).
Schrader, J. et al. The inhibition mechanism of human 20S proteasomes enables next-generation inhibitor design. Science 353, 594–598 (2016).
Ladi, E. et al. Design and evaluation of highly selective human immunoproteasome inhibitors reveal a compensatory process that preserves immune cell viability. J. Med. Chem. 62, 7032–7041 (2019).
Santos, R. et al. Structure of human immunoproteasome with a reversible and noncompetitive inhibitor that selectively inhibits activated lymphocytes. Nat. Commun. 8, 1–11 (2017).
van de Waterbeemd, M. et al. Structural analysis of a temperature-induced transition in a viral capsid probed by HDX-MS. Biophys. J. 112, 1157–1165 (2017).
Marcoux, J. et al. p47phox molecular activation for assembly of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase complex. J. Biol. Chem. 285, 28980–28990 (2010).
Guillet, V. et al. Structural insights into chaperone addiction of toxin-antitoxin systems. Nat. Commun. 10, 782 (2019).
Chalmers, M. J. et al. Probing protein ligand interactions by automated hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 78, 1005–1014 (2006).
Ugras, S. et al. Induction of the immunoproteasome subunit Lmp7 links proteostasis and immunity in α-synuclein aggregation disorders. EBioMedicine 31, 307–319 (2018).
Jallow, S. et al. The presence of prolines in the flanking region of an immunodominant HIV-2 gag epitope influences the quality and quantity of the epitope generated. Eur. J. Immunol. 45, 2232–2242 (2015).
Pickering, A. M. & Davies, K. J. A. Differential roles of proteasome and immunoproteasome regulators Pa28αβ, Pa28γ and Pa200 in the degradation of oxidized proteins. Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 523, 181–190 (2012).
Osmulski, P. A. & Gaczynska, M. Nanoenzymology of the 20S proteasome: proteasomal actions are controlled by the allosteric transition. Biochemistry 41, 7047–7053 (2002).
Osmulski, P. A., Hochstrasser, M. & Gaczynska, M. A tetrahedral transition state at the active sites of the 20S proteasome is coupled to opening of the α-ring channel. Struct. Lond. Engl. 1993, 1137–1147 (2009).
Huang, R., Pérez, F. & Kay, L. E. Probing the cooperativity of Thermoplasma acidophilum proteasome core particle gating by NMR spectroscopy. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 114, E9846–E9854 (2017).
Park, S. et al. Reconfiguration of the proteasome during chaperone-mediated assembly. Nature 497, 512–516 (2013).
Arciniega, M., Beck, P., Lange, O. F., Groll, M. & Huber, R. Differential global structural changes in the core particle of yeast and mouse proteasome induced by ligand binding. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 111, 9479–9484 (2014).
Whitby, F. G. et al. Structural basis for the activation of 20S proteasomes by 11S regulators. Nature 408, 115–120 (2000).
Förster, A., Masters, E. I., Whitby, F. G., Robinson, H. & Hill, C. P. The 1.9 \AA structure of a proteasome-11S activator complex and implications for proteasome-PAN/PA700 interactions. Mol. Cell 18, 589–599 (2005).
Waterhouse, A. et al. SWISS-MODEL: homology modelling of protein structures and complexes. Nucleic Acids Res. 46, W296–W303 (2018).
Raule, M., Cerruti, F. & Cascio, P. Enhanced rate of degradation of basic proteins by 26S immunoproteasomes. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1843, 1942–1947 (2014).
Jonik-Nowak, B. et al. PIP30/FAM192A is a novel regulator of the nuclear proteasome activator PA28γ. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 115, E6477–E6486 (2018).
Welk, V. et al. Inhibition of proteasome activity induces formation of alternative proteasome complexes. J. Biol. Chem. 291, 13147–13159 (2016).
Sheff, J. G., Hepburn, M., Yu, Y., Lees-Miller, S. P. & Schriemer, D. C. Nanospray HX-MS configuration for structural interrogation of large protein systems. Analyst 142, 904–910 (2017).
Sowole, M. A., Alexopoulos, J. A., Cheng, Y.-Q., Ortega, J. & Konermann, L. Activation of ClpP protease by ADEP antibiotics: insights from hydrogen exchange mass spectrometry. J. Mol. Biol. 425, 4508–4519 (2013).
Wales, T. E. & Engen, J. R. Partial unfolding of diverse SH3 domains on a wide timescale. J. Mol. Biol. 357, 1592–1604 (2006).
Li, M. J., Guttman, M. & Atkins, W. M. Conformational dynamics of P-glycoprotein in lipid nanodiscs and detergent micelles reveal complex motions on a wide time scale. J. Biol. Chem. 293, 6297–6307 (2018).
Sbardella, D. et al. The insulin-degrading enzyme is an allosteric modulator of the 20S proteasome and a potential competitor of the 19S. Cell. Mol. Life Sci. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00018-018-2807-y (2018).
Lesne, J., Bousquet, M.-P., Marcoux, J. & Locard-Paulet, M. Top-down and intact protein mass spectrometry data visualization for proteoform analysis using VisioProt-MS. Bioinforma. Biol. Insights 13, 1177932219868223 (2019).
Stohwasser, R., Salzmann, U., Giesebrecht, J., Kloetzel, P.-M. & Holzhütter, H.-G. Kinetic evidences for facilitation of peptide channelling by the proteasome activator PA28. Eur. J. Biochem. 267, 6221–6230 (2000).
Sugiyama, M. et al. Spatial arrangement and functional role of α subunits of proteasome activator PA28 in hetero-oligomeric form. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 432, 141–145 (2013).
Fabre, B. et al. Deciphering preferential interactions within supramolecular protein complexes: the proteasome case. Mol. Syst. Biol. 11, 771 (2015).
Chen, J. et al. Cryo-EM of mammalian PA28αβ-iCP immunoproteasome reveals a distinct mechanism of proteasome activation by PA28αβ. bioRxiv https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.29.067652 (2020).
Olshina, M. A. et al. Regulation of the 20S proteasome by a novel family of inhibitory proteins. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 32, 636–655 (2020).
Bouyssié, D. et al. HDX-Viewer: interactive 3D visualization of hydrogen-deuterium exchange data. Bioinforma. Oxf. Engl. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz550 (2019).
Goddard, T. D. et al. UCSF ChimeraX: meeting modern challenges in visualization and analysis. Protein Sci. Publ. Protein Soc. 27, 14–25 (2018).
Perez-Riverol, Y. et al. The PRIDE database and related tools and resources in 2019: improving support for quantification data. Nucleic Acids Res. 47, D442–D450 (2019).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the French Ministry of Research (ANR-ProteasoRegMS to J.M. and Investissements d’Avenir Program, Proteomics French Infrastructure, ANR-10-INBS-08 to O.B.-S.), the 631 Fonds Européens de Développement Régional Toulouse Métropole and the Région Midi-Pyrénées (O.B.-S.), and the Novo Nordisk Foundation (NNF14CC0001).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
All authors contributed to editing the manuscript and figures. J.L. performed the HDX-MS optimization and data acquisition, model building and data analysis. J.P. performed the HDX-MS optimization, data acquisition, and data analysis. D.Z. and T.M. performed experiments. M.L.P. analyzed the data and wrote the paper. O.B.-S. provided critical input. M.P.B. provided critical expertise on the proteasome. J.M. designed, performed and supervised the experiments, data and structural analysis, and wrote the paper.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Peer review information Nature Communications thanks Frank Sobott and other, anonymous, reviewers for their contributions to the peer review of this work. Peer review reports are available.
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Lesne, J., Locard-Paulet, M., Parra, J. et al. Conformational maps of human 20S proteasomes reveal PA28- and immuno-dependent inter-ring crosstalks. Nat Commun 11, 6140 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19934-z
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19934-z
This article is cited by
-
Protein degradation by human 20S proteasomes elucidates the interplay between peptide hydrolysis and splicing
Nature Communications (2024)
-
CCDC92 promotes podocyte injury by regulating PA28α/ABCA1/cholesterol efflux axis in type 2 diabetic mice
Acta Pharmacologica Sinica (2024)
-
Identification of a BRAF/PA28γ/MEK1 signaling axis and its role in epithelial-mesenchymal transition in oral submucous fibrosis
Cell Death & Disease (2022)
-
PA28γ–20S proteasome is a proteolytic complex committed to degrade unfolded proteins
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences (2022)
-
Cryo-EM of mammalian PA28αβ-iCP immunoproteasome reveals a distinct mechanism of proteasome activation by PA28αβ
Nature Communications (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.