9pdn
From Proteopedia
Nub1/Fat10-processing human 26S proteasome with Rpt1 at top of spiral staircase (AAA+ locally refined)
Structural highlights
FunctionPRS8_HUMAN The 26S protease is involved in the ATP-dependent degradation of ubiquitinated proteins. The regulatory (or ATPase) complex confers ATP dependency and substrate specificity to the 26S complex. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe 26S proteasome targets many cellular proteins for degradation during homeostasis and quality control. Proteasome-interacting cofactors modulate these functions and aid in substrate degradation. Here we solve high-resolution structures of the redox active cofactor TXNL1 bound to the human 26S proteasome at saturating and substoichiometric concentrations by time-resolved cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). We identify distinct binding modes of TXNL1 that depend on the proteasome conformation and ATPase motor states. Together with biophysical and biochemical experiments, we show that the resting-state proteasome binds TXNL1 with low affinity and in variable positions on top of the Rpn11 deubiquitinase. In contrast, in the actively degrading proteasome, TXNL1 uses additional interactions for high-affinity binding, whereby its C-terminal tail covers the catalytic groove of Rpn11 and coordinates the active-site Zn(2+). Furthermore, these cryo-EM structures of the degrading proteasome capture the ATPase hexamer in several spiral-staircase arrangements that indicate temporally asymmetric hydrolysis and conformational changes in bursts during mechanical substrate unfolding and translocation. Remarkably, we catch the proteasome in the act of unfolding the beta-barrel mEos3.2 substrate while the ATPase hexamer is in a particular staircase register. Our findings advance current models for protein translocation through hexameric AAA+ motors and reveal how the proteasome uses its distinct conformational states to coordinate cofactor binding and substrate processing. Structural landscape of the degrading 26S proteasome reveals conformation-specific binding of TXNL1.,Arkinson C, Gee CL, Zhang Z, Dong KC, Martin A Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2025 Nov 6. doi: 10.1038/s41594-025-01695-2. PMID:41198955[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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