Biophysical characterization of the interaction of Atg8 with a disordered region of Nup159 involved in selective autophagy of the nuclear pore complex

A functional proteome in the cell is maintained by coordinate regulation of biogenesis, folding, and degradation of cellular proteins. Although the degradation pathways have been extensively characterized for various substrates, it remains elusive how large multiprotein complexes are selectively deg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemical and biophysical research communications 2022-05, Vol.604, p.172-178
Hauptverfasser: Kim, RyeongHyeon, Koh, Junseock
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A functional proteome in the cell is maintained by coordinate regulation of biogenesis, folding, and degradation of cellular proteins. Although the degradation pathways have been extensively characterized for various substrates, it remains elusive how large multiprotein complexes are selectively degraded. Recent investigations have discovered selective autophagic degradation of the yeast Nuclear Pore Complex (NPC) consisting of ∼500 proteins and mediating selective nucleocytoplasmic transport. To understand the underlying molecular mechanism of NPC-phagy, we performed biophysical characterization of the interaction between Atg8 and an intrinsically disordered region (IDR) of Nup159 involved in the initial recognition step. In particular, from the systematic isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments, we determined the thermodynamic parameters and discovered a significant negative heat capacity change (ΔCp°) for the interaction. Furthermore, the heat capacity change becomes more negative at higher temperatures, yielding a negative curvature in the observed enthalpy change (ΔH°) with respect to temperature. This thermodynamic feature was analyzed in terms of coupling between binding and conformational equilibria of Atg8 and/or Nup159 IDR. We interpret the coupled conformational equilibria as disorder-to-order transitions or local stabilizations of Nup159 IDR and/or partially unfolded Atg8 upon binding. A potential impact of the proposed coupling in the initial step of NPC-phagy is discussed. In a broader view, our study demonstrates that a negative curvature of ΔH° can be used as a probe for conformational selection processes in the interactions of IDRs with their target proteins. [Display omitted] •Thermodynamic dissection of Atg8 binding to a disordered region of Nup159.•Temperature-dependent, negative heat capacity change for the interaction.•Conformational transitions of Atg8 or Nup159 disordered region coupled to binding.•Potential impact of the coupling in selective autophagy of the nuclear pore complex.•Heat capacity change as a probe for conformational selection processes.
ISSN:0006-291X
1090-2104
DOI:10.1016/j.bbrc.2022.03.056