AI Article Synopsis

  • Proteasomes are crucial for maintaining protein balance in eukaryotic cells, but their function can be disrupted by environmental factors and drugs.
  • Reducing levels of certain subunits in the proteasome's 19S complex surprisingly increased cell survival when proteasome activity was inhibited.
  • This suggests that a slight reduction in 19S function helps cells manage stress by increasing the ratio of different proteasome types and maintaining protein degradation ability, a mechanism that seems to be evolutionarily conserved across species from yeast to humans.

Article Abstract

Proteasomes are central regulators of protein homeostasis in eukaryotes. Proteasome function is vulnerable to environmental insults, cellular protein imbalance and targeted pharmaceuticals. Yet, mechanisms that cells deploy to counteract inhibition of this central regulator are little understood. To find such mechanisms, we reduced flux through the proteasome to the point of toxicity with specific inhibitors and performed genome-wide screens for mutations that allowed cells to survive. Counter to expectation, reducing expression of individual subunits of the proteasome's 19S regulatory complex increased survival. Strong 19S reduction was cytotoxic but modest reduction protected cells from inhibitors. Protection was accompanied by an increased ratio of 20S to 26S proteasomes, preservation of protein degradation capacity and reduced proteotoxic stress. While compromise of 19S function can have a fitness cost under basal conditions, it provided a powerful survival advantage when proteasome function was impaired. This means of rebalancing proteostasis is conserved from yeast to humans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4551903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.08467DOI Listing

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