This is a preprint.
Bidirectional substrate shuttling between the 26S proteasome and the Cdc48 ATPase promotes protein degradation
- PMID: 38187576
- PMCID: PMC10769200
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.12.20.572403
Bidirectional substrate shuttling between the 26S proteasome and the Cdc48 ATPase promotes protein degradation
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Bidirectional substrate shuttling between the 26S proteasome and the Cdc48 ATPase promotes protein degradation.Mol Cell. 2024 Apr 4;84(7):1290-1303.e7. doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2024.01.029. Epub 2024 Feb 23. Mol Cell. 2024. PMID: 38401542 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Most eukaryotic proteins are degraded by the 26S proteasome after modification with a polyubiquitin chain. Substrates lacking unstructured segments cannot be degraded directly and require prior unfolding by the Cdc48 ATPase (p97 or VCP in mammals) in complex with its ubiquitin-binding partner Ufd1-Npl4 (UN). Here, we use purified yeast components to reconstitute Cdc48-dependent degradation of well-folded model substrates by the proteasome. We show that a minimal system consists of the 26S proteasome, the Cdc48-UN ATPase complex, the proteasome cofactor Rad23, and the Cdc48 cofactors Ubx5 and Shp1. Rad23 and Ubx5 stimulate polyubiquitin binding to the 26S proteasome and the Cdc48-UN complex, respectively, allowing these machines to compete for substrates before and after their unfolding. Shp1 stimulates protein unfolding by the Cdc48-UN complex, rather than substrate recruitment. In vivo experiments confirm that many proteins undergo bidirectional substrate shuttling between the 26S proteasome and Cdc48 ATPase before being degraded.
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