Mechanism of autocatalytic activation during proteasome assembly

Benjamin Velez,Richard M. Walsh Jr,Shaun Rawson,Aida Razi, Lea Adams, Erignacio Fermin Perez,Fenglong Jiao, Marie Blickling, Tamayanthi Rajakumar, Darlene Fung,Lan Huang,John Hanna

NATURE STRUCTURAL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY(2024)

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Abstract
Many large molecular machines are too elaborate to assemble spontaneously and are built through ordered pathways orchestrated by dedicated chaperones. During assembly of the core particle (CP) of the proteasome, where protein degradation occurs, its six active sites are simultaneously activated via cleavage of N-terminal propeptides. Such activation is autocatalytic and coupled to fusion of two half-CP intermediates, which protects cells by preventing activation until enclosure of the active sites within the CP interior. Here we uncover key mechanistic aspects of autocatalytic activation, which proceeds through alignment of the beta 5 and beta 2 catalytic triad residues, respectively, with these triads being misaligned before fusion. This mechanism contrasts with most other zymogens, in which catalytic centers are preformed. Our data also clarify the mechanism by which individual subunits can be added in a precise, temporally ordered manner. This work informs two decades-old mysteries in the proteasome field, with broader implications for protease biology and multisubunit complex assembly. To prevent promiscuous protein degradation, proteasomes are initially assembled as inactive complexes. Their activation is autocatalytic and coupled to assembly. Here the authors uncover key aspects of the autocatalytic activation mechanism.
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