School of Chemistry - Research Publications

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    A Census of Hsp70-Mediated Proteome Solubility Changes upon Recovery from Heat Stress
    Sui, X ; Cox, D ; Nie, S ; Reid, GE ; Hatters, DM (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2022-05-06)
    Eukaryotic cells respond to heat shock through several regulatory processes including upregulation of stress responsive chaperones and reversible shutdown of cellular activities through formation of protein assemblies. However, the underlying regulatory mechanisms of the recovery of these heat-induced protein assemblies remain largely elusive. Here, we measured the proteome abundance and solubility changes during recovery from heat shock in the mouse Neuro2a cell line. We found that prefoldins and translation machinery are rapidly down-regulated as the first step in the heat shock response. Analysis of proteome solubility reveals that a rapid mobilization of protein quality control machineries, along with changes in cellular energy metabolism, translational activity, and actin cytoskeleton are fundamental to the early stress responses. In contrast, longer term adaptation to stress involves renewal of core cellular components. Inhibition of the Hsp70 family, pivotal for the heat shock response, selectively and negatively affects the ribosomal machinery and delays the solubility recovery of many nuclear proteins. ProteomeXchange: PXD030069.
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    Widespread remodeling of proteome solubility in response to different protein homeostasis stresses
    Sui, X ; Pires, DEV ; Ormsby, AR ; Cox, D ; Nie, S ; Vecchi, G ; Vendruscolo, M ; Ascher, DB ; Reid, GE ; Hatters, DM (National Academy of Sciences, 2020-02-04)
    The accumulation of protein deposits in neurodegenerative diseases has been hypothesized to depend on a metastable subproteome vulnerable to aggregation. To investigate this phenomenon and the mechanisms that regulate it, we measured the solubility of the proteome in the mouse Neuro2a cell line under six different protein homeostasis stresses: 1) Huntington’s disease proteotoxicity, 2) Hsp70, 3) Hsp90, 4) proteasome, 5) endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mediated folding inhibition, and 6) oxidative stress. Overall, we found that about one-fifth of the proteome changed solubility with almost all of the increases in insolubility were counteracted by increases in solubility of other proteins. Each stress directed a highly specific pattern of change, which reflected the remodeling of protein complexes involved in adaptation to perturbation, most notably, stress granule (SG) proteins, which responded differently to different stresses. These results indicate that the protein homeostasis system is organized in a modular manner and aggregation patterns were not correlated with protein folding stability (ΔG). Instead, distinct cellular mechanisms regulate assembly patterns of multiple classes of protein complexes under different stress conditions.
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    Hidden information on protein function in censuses of proteome foldedness
    Cox, D ; Ang, C-S ; Nillegoda, NB ; Reid, GE ; Hatters, DM (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2022-04-14)
    Methods that assay protein foldedness with proteomics have generated censuses of apparent protein folding stabilities in biological milieu. However, different censuses poorly correlate with each other. Here, we show that the reason for this is that methods targeting foldedness through monitoring amino acid sidechain reactivity also detect changes in conformation and ligand binding, which can be a substantial fraction of the data. We show that the reactivity of only one quarter of cysteine or methionine sidechains in proteins in a urea denaturation curve of mammalian cell lysate can be confidently explained by a two-state unfolding isotherm. Contrary to that expected from unfolding, up to one third of the cysteines decreased reactivity. These cysteines were enriched in proteins with functions relating to unfolded protein stress. One protein, chaperone HSPA8, displayed changes arising from ligand and cofactor binding. Unmasking this hidden information using the approaches outlined here should improve efforts to understand both folding and the remodeling of protein function directly in complex biological settings.
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    Arginine in C9ORF72 Dipolypeptides Mediates Promiscuous Proteome Binding and Multiple Modes of Toxicity
    Radwan, M ; Ang, C-S ; Ormsby, AR ; Cox, D ; Daly, JC ; Reid, GE ; Hatters, DM (ELSEVIER, 2020-04)
    C9ORF72-associated Motor Neuron Disease patients feature abnormal expression of 5 dipeptide repeat (DPR) polymers. Here we used quantitative proteomics in a mouse neuronal-like cell line (Neuro2a) to demonstrate that the Arg residues in the most toxic DPRS, PR and GR, leads to a promiscuous binding to the proteome compared with a relative sparse binding of the more inert AP and GA. Notable targets included ribosomal proteins, translation initiation factors and translation elongation factors. PR and GR comprising more than 10 repeats appeared to robustly stall on ribosomes during translation suggesting Arg-rich peptide domains can electrostatically jam the ribosome exit tunnel during synthesis. Poly-GR also recruited arginine methylases, induced hypomethylation of endogenous proteins, and induced a profound destabilization of the actin cytoskeleton. Our findings point to arginine in GR and PR polymers as multivalent toxins to translation as well as arginine methylation that may explain the dysfunction of biological processes including ribosome biogenesis, mRNA splicing and cytoskeleton assembly.