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Affinity purification strategy to capture human endogenous proteasome complexes diversity and to identify proteasome-interacting proteins.

Bousquet-Dubouch MP, Baudelet E, Guérin F, Matondo M, Uttenweiler-Joseph S, Burlet-Schiltz O, Monsarrat B

Mol Cell Proteomics. 2009 May; 8(5):1150-64

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Gustavo Goldman and Marcelo Damario, FCFRP-Universidade de Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil. F1000 Microbiology

22 May 2009 | New Finding, Technical Advance, Confirmation

The proteasome is a large multisubunit complex that catalyzes protein degradation in a number of cellular events. Thus, it is crucial to characterize endogenous proteasome-interacting proteins (PIPs), which will provide insights for subsequent study of its activity and regulation. In this paper, the authors use immunoaffinity chromatography with the mouse monoclonal antibody MCP21 directed against the human two subunit of 20 S proteasome in combination with mass spectrometry to characterize proteasome complexes and their PIPs in human erythrocytes.

This was performed in parallel with erythrocytes treated with formaldehyde which were used to stabilize the protein-protein interactions. Importantly, because no overexpression or tagging strategies were involved, the authors proposed that it can be applied on any biological sample. The work reveals an interesting and single step procedure to purify fully active 26 S proteasome with or without formaldehyde cross-linking under mild conditions. Eighty-six proteins were identified as PIPs; 41 were subunits, activators, inhibitors or stabilizers of the proteasome, whereas 23 were involved in the ubiquitin-proteasome degradation pathway. Among these 23, HAUSP/Usp7, which is an ubiquitin-specific protease, was confirmed by reverse immunoprecipitation experiment using anti-HAUSP antibody. In summary, the immunopurification procedure described here to identify protein-protein interactions in proteasome represents a new strategy for a better understanding of such a complex molecular machine in biological samples under different cell physiological states.

Competing interests: None declared

Damario M, Goldman G: "The proteasome is a large multisubunit complex that catalyzes protein degradation in a number of..." Evaluation of: [Bousquet-Dubouch MP et al. Affinity purification strategy to capture human endogenous proteasome complexes diversity and to identify proteasome-interacting proteins. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2009 May; 8(5):1150-64; doi: 10.1074/mcp.M800193-MCP200]. Faculty of 1000, 22 May 2009. F1000.com/1159775#eval621186

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Damario M, Goldman G: 2009. F1000.com/1159775#eval621186

Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Bousquet-Dubouch MP et al. Affinity purification strategy to capture human endogenous proteasome complexes diversity and to identify proteasome-interacting proteins. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2009 May; 8(5):1150-64; doi: 10.1074/mcp.M800193-MCP200]. Faculty of 1000, 22 May 2009. F1000.com/1159775

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Faculty of 1000: 2009. F1000.com/1159775

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An affinity purification strategy was developed to characterize human proteasome complexes diversity as well as endogenous proteasome-interacting proteins (PIPs). This single step procedure, initially used for 20 S proteasome purification, was adapted to purify all existing physiological proteasome complexes associated to their various regulatory complexes and to their interacting partners. The method was applied to the purification of proteasome complexes and their PIPs from human erythrocytes but can be used to purify proteasomes from any human sample as starting material. The benefit of in vivo formaldehyde cross-linking as a stabilizer of protein-protein interactions was studied by comparing the status of purified proteasomes and the identified proteins in both protocols (with or without formaldehyde cross-linking). Subsequent proteomics analyses identified all proteasomal subunits, known regulators, and recently assigned partners. Moreover other proteins implicated at different levels of the ubiquitin-proteasome system were also identified for the first time as PIPs. One of them, the ubiquitin-specific protease USP7, also known as HAUSP, is an important player in the p53-HDM2 pathway. The specificity of the interaction was further confirmed using a complementary approach that consisted of the reverse immunoprecipitation with HAUSP as a bait. Altogether we provide a valuable tool that should contribute, through the identification of partners likely to affect proteasomal function, to a better understanding of this complex proteolytic machinery in any living human cell and/or organ/tissue and in different cell physiological states.

DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M800193-MCP200

PMID: 19193609

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