Species-specific protein–protein interactions govern the humanization of the 20S proteasome in yeast

Author:

Sultana Sarmin1,Abdullah Mudabir1,Li Jianhui2,Hochstrasser Mark2,Kachroo Aashiq H1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Applied Synthetic Biology, Department of Biology, Concordia University , 7141 Sherbrooke St. W, Montreal, QC H3G 1M8 , Canada

2. Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06520 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Yeast and humans share thousands of genes despite a billion years of evolutionary divergence. While many human genes can functionally replace their yeast counterparts, nearly half of the tested shared genes cannot. For example, most yeast proteasome subunits are “humanizable,” except subunits comprising the β-ring core, including β2c (HsPSMB7, a constitutive proteasome subunit). We developed a high-throughput pipeline to humanize yeast proteasomes by generating a large library of Hsβ2c mutants and screening them for complementation of a yeast β2 (ScPup1) knockout. Variants capable of replacing ScPup1 included (1) those impacting local protein–protein interactions (PPIs), with most affecting interactions between the β2c C-terminal tail and the adjacent β3 subunit, and (2) those affecting β2c proteolytic activity. Exchanging the full-length tail of human β2c with that of ScPup1 enabled complementation. Moreover, wild-type human β2c could replace yeast β2 if human β3 was also provided. Unexpectedly, yeast proteasomes bearing a catalytically inactive HsPSMB7-T44A variant that blocked precursor autoprocessing were viable, suggesting an intact propeptide stabilizes late assembly intermediates. In contrast, similar modifications in human β2i (HsPSMB10), an immunoproteasome subunit and the co-ortholog of yeast β2, do not enable complementation in yeast, suggesting distinct interactions are involved in human immunoproteasome core assembly. Broadly, our data reveal roles for specific PPIs governing functional replaceability across vast evolutionary distances.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

CRC

Canada Foundation for Innovation

FRQNT Research

National Institutes of Health

School of Graduate Studies

Faculty of Arts and Sciences

Concordia University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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