Sumit Prakash
Northwestern University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sumit Prakash.
Molecular Cell | 2001
Cheolju Lee; Michael P. Schwartz; Sumit Prakash; Masahiro Iwakura; Andreas Matouschek
Protein unfolding is a key step in several cellular processes, including protein translocation across some membranes and protein degradation by ATP-dependent proteases. ClpAP protease and the proteasome can actively unfold proteins in a process that hydrolyzes ATP. Here we show that these proteases seem to catalyze unfolding by processively unraveling their substrates from the attachment point of the degradation signal. As a consequence, the ability of a protein to be degraded depends on its structure as well as its stability. In multidomain proteins, independently stable domains are unfolded sequentially. We show that these results can explain the limited degradation by the proteasome that occurs in the processing of the precursor of the transcription factor NF-kappaB.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004
Sumit Prakash; Lin Tian; Kevin S. Ratliff; Rebecca E Lehotzky; Andreas Matouschek
The proteasome is the main ATP-dependent protease in eukaryotic cells and controls the concentration of many regulatory proteins in the cytosol and nucleus. Proteins are targeted to the proteasome by the covalent attachment of polyubiquitin chains. The ubiquitin modification serves as the proteasome recognition element but by itself is not sufficient for efficient degradation of folded proteins. We report that proteolysis of tightly folded proteins is accelerated greatly when an unstructured region is attached to the substrate. The unstructured region serves as the initiation site for degradation and is hydrolyzed first, after which the rest of the protein is digested sequentially. These results identify the initiation site as a novel component of the targeting signal, which is required to engage the proteasome unfolding machinery efficiently. The proteasome degrades a substrate by first binding to its ubiquitin modification and then initiating unfolding at an unstructured region.
Molecular Cell | 2003
Christophe Herman; Sumit Prakash; Chi Zen Lu; Andreas Matouschek; Carol A. Gross
FtsH, a member of the AAA family of proteins, is the only membrane ATP-dependent protease universally conserved in prokaryotes, and the only essential ATP-dependent protease in Escherichia coli. We investigated the mechanism of degradation by FtsH. Other well-studied ATP-dependent proteases use ATP to unfold their substrates. In contrast, both in vitro and in vivo studies indicate that degradation by FtsH occurs efficiently only when the substrate is a protein of low intrinsic thermodynamic stability. Because FtsH lacks robust unfoldase activity, it is able to use the protein folding state of substrates as a criterion for degradation. This feature may be key to its role in the cell and account for its ubiquitous distribution among prokaryotic organisms.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Mohammad M. Mohammad; Sumit Prakash; and Andreas Matouschek; Liviu Movileanu
Protein-protein pore interaction is a fundamental and ubiquitous process in biology and medical biotechnology. Here, we employed high-resolution time-resolved single-channel electrical recording along with protein engineering to examine a protein-protein pore interaction at single-molecule resolution. The pore was formed by Staphylococcus aureus alpha-hemolysin (alphaHL) protein and contained electrostatic traps formed by rings of seven aspartic acid residues placed at two different positions within the pore lumen. The protein analytes were positively charged presequences (pb2) of varying length fused to the small ribonuclease barnase (Ba). The presence of the electrostatic traps greatly enhanced the interaction of the pb2-Ba protein with the alphaHL protein pore. This study demonstrates the high sensitivity of the nanopore technique to an array of factors that govern the protein-protein pore interaction, including the length of the pb2 presequence, the position of the electrostatic traps within the pore lumen, the ionic strength of the aqueous phase, and the transmembrane potential. Alterations in the functional properties of the pb2-Ba protein and the alphaHL protein pore and systematic changes of the experimental parameters revealed the balance between forces driving the pb2-Ba protein into the pore and forces driving it out.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2011
Tomonao Inobe; Susan Fishbain; Sumit Prakash; Andreas Matouschek
The eukaryotic 26S proteasome controls cellular processes by degrading specific regulatory proteins. Most proteins are targeted for degradation by a signal or degron that consists of two parts: a proteasome-binding tag, typically covalently attached polyubiquitin chains, and an unstructured region that serves as the initiation region for proteasomal proteolysis. Here we have characterized how the arrangement of the two degron parts in a protein affects degradation. We found that a substrate is degraded efficiently only when its initiation region is of a certain minimal length and is appropriately separated in space from the proteasome-binding tag. Regions that are located too close or too far from the proteasome-binding tag cannot access the proteasome and induce degradation. These spacing requirements are different for a polyubiquitin chain and a ubiquitin-like (UbL) domain. Thus, arrangement and location of the proteasome initiation region affect a protein’s fate and play a central role in selecting proteins for proteasome-mediated degradation.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2009
Sumit Prakash; Tomonao Inobe; Ace Joseph Hatch; Andreas Matouschek
The proteasome controls the turnover of most cellular proteins. Two structural features are typically required for proteins to be degraded: covalently attached ubiquitin polypeptides that allow binding to the proteasome, and an unstructured region in the targeted protein that initiates proteolysis. Here, we have tested the degradation of model proteins to further explore how the proteasome selects its substrates. Using purified yeast proteasome and mammalian proteasome in cell lysate, we have demonstrated that the two structural features can act in trans when separated onto different proteins in a multi-subunit complex. In such complexes, the location of the unstructured initiation site and its chemical properties determine which subunit is degraded. Thus, our findings reveal the molecular basis of subunit specificity in the degradation of protein complexes. In addition, our data provide a plausible explanation for how adaptor proteins can bind to otherwise stable proteins and target them for degradation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Cheolju Lee; Sumit Prakash; Andreas Matouschek
The proteasome can actively unfold proteins by sequentially unraveling their substrates from the attachment point of the degradation signal. To investigate the steric constraints imposed on substrate proteins during their degradation by the proteasome, we constructed a model protein in which specific parts of the polypeptide chain were covalently connected through disulfide bridges. The cross-linked model proteins were fully degraded by the proteasome, but two or more cross-links retarded the degradation slightly. These results suggest that the pore of the proteasome allows the concurrent passage of at least three stretches of a polypeptide chain. A degradation channel that can tolerate some steric bulk may reconcile the two opposing needs for degradation that is compartmentalized to avoid aberrant proteolysis yet able to handle a range of substrates of various sizes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Prakash Koodathingal; Neil E. Jaffe; Daniel A. Kraut; Sumit Prakash; Susan Fishbain; Christophe Herman; Andreas Matouschek
ATP-dependent proteases control the concentrations of hundreds of regulatory proteins and remove damaged or misfolded proteins from cells. They select their substrates primarily by recognizing sequence motifs or covalent modifications. Once a substrate is bound to the protease, it has to be unfolded and translocated into the proteolytic chamber to be degraded. Some proteases appear to be promiscuous, degrading substrates with poorly defined targeting signals, which suggests that selectivity may be controlled at additional levels. Here we compare the abilities of representatives from all classes of ATP-dependent proteases to unfold a model substrate protein and find that the unfolding abilities range over more than 2 orders of magnitude. We propose that these differences in unfolding abilities contribute to the fates of substrate proteins and may act as a further layer of selectivity during protein destruction.
Nature Communications | 2011
Susan Fishbain; Sumit Prakash; Annie Herrig; Suzanne Elsasser; Andreas Matouschek
Rad23 is an adaptor protein that binds to both ubiquitinated substrates and to the proteasome. Despite its association with the proteasome, Rad23 escapes degradation. Here we show that Rad23 remains stable because it lacks an effective initiation region where the proteasome can engage the protein and unfold it. Rad23 contains several internal, unstructured loops but these are too short to act as initiation regions. Experiments with model proteins show that internal loops must be surprisingly long to engage the proteasome and support degradation. These length requirements are not specific to Rad23 and reflect a general property of the proteasome.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2004
Sumit Prakash; Andreas Matouschek