Abstract
The standard methods for the isolation of the 26S proteasomes from mammalian tissues have long involved multiple chromatographic steps. This process led to loss of loosely associated regulatory proteins or cofactors and yielded particles with low functional capacity. Here, we describe a single-step affinity purification of 26S proteasome complexes that preserves the association with many 26S proteasome-interacting proteins. Our approach uses the ubiquitin-like domain of human RAD23B as an affinity bait, which allows the rapid and gentle isolation of 26S proteasomes with high purity. This strategy does not require the genetic introduction of tagged subunits nor expensive antibodies, and therefore can be used to isolate 26S proteasomes from any mammalian tissue or yeast. This method, therefore, is an important new tool to study 26S proteasome function in various models of human diseases that are linked to changes in the ubiquitin proteasome system, for example the increased proteasomal proteolysis seen in muscle wasting or the decreased proteasomal capacity that has been reported in various neurodegenerative diseases.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Glickman MH, Raveh D (2005) Proteasome plasticity. FEBS Lett 579:3214–3223.
Schmidt M, Hanna J, Elsasser S, Finley D (2005) Proteasome-associated proteins: regulation of a proteolytic machine. Biol Chem 386:725–737.
Bousquet-Dubouch MP, Baudelet E, Guerin F, et al (2009) Affinity purification strategy to capture human endogenous proteasome complexes diversity and to identify proteasome-interacting proteins. Mol Cell Proteomics 8:1150–1164.
Guerrero C, Tagwerker C, Kaiser P, Huang, L (2006) An integrated mass spectrometry-based proteomic approach: quantitative analysis of tandem affinity-purified in vivo cross-linked protein complexes (QTAX) to decipher the 26S proteasome-interacting network. Mol Cell Proteomics 5:366–378.
Leggett DS, Hanna J, Borodovsky A, et al (2002) Multiple associated proteins regulate proteasome structure and function. Mol Cell 10:495–507.
Verma R, Chen S, Feldman R, et al (2000) Proteasomal proteomics: identification of nucleotide-sensitive proteasome-interacting proteins by mass spectrometric analysis of affinity-purified proteasomes. Mol Biol Cell 11:3425–3439.
Wang X, Chen CF, Baker PR, et al (2007) Mass spectrometric characterization of the affinity-purified human 26S proteasome complex. Biochemistry 46:3553–3565.
Besche HC, Haas W, Gygi SP, Goldberg AL (2009) Isolation of mammalian 26S proteasomes and p97/VCP complexes using the ubiquitin-like domain from HHR23B reveals novel proteasome-associated proteins. Biochemistry 48:2538–2549.
Young P, Deveraux Q, Beal RE, et al (1998) Characterization of two polyubiquitin binding sites in the 26S protease subunit 5a. J Biol Chem 273:5461–5467.
Scanlon TC, Gottlieb B, Durcan TM, et al (2009) Isolation of human proteasomes and putative proteasome-interacting proteins using a novel affinity chromatography method. Exp Cell Res 315:176–189.
Wang X, Huang L (2008) Identifying dynamic interactors of protein complexes by quantitative mass spectrometry. Mol Cell Proteomics 7:46–57.
Peth A, Besche HC,Goldberg AL (2009) Ubiquitinated proteins activate the proteasome by binding to Usp14/Ubp6, which causes 20S gate opening. Mol Cell 36:794–804.
Peth A, Uchiki T,Goldberg AL (2010) ATP-dependent steps in the binding of ubiquitin conjugates to the 26S proteasome that commit to degradation. Mol Cell 40:671–681.
Tai HC, Besche H, Goldberg AL, Schuman EM (2010) Characterization of the Brain 26S Proteasome and its Interacting Proteins. Front Mol Neurosci 3:12.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
About this protocol
Cite this protocol
Besche, H.C., Goldberg, A.L. (2012). Affinity Purification of Mammalian 26S Proteasomes Using an Ubiquitin-Like Domain. In: Dohmen, R., Scheffner, M. (eds) Ubiquitin Family Modifiers and the Proteasome. Methods in Molecular Biology, vol 832. Humana Press. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-474-2_29
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-474-2_29
Published:
Publisher Name: Humana Press
Print ISBN: 978-1-61779-473-5
Online ISBN: 978-1-61779-474-2
eBook Packages: Springer Protocols