The impact and function of C-terminal degrons and protein misfolding in the degradation of truncated proteins
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Altres autors/es
Data de publicació
2020-09-15Resum
Premature Termination Codons (PTCs) are mainly generated after nonsense and frameshift
alterations. The Nonsense Mediated Decay (NMD) system detects and degrades mRNAs
containing PTCs. However, the efficiency of this surveillance mechanism is limited and some
PTC-containing mRNAs can escape from degradation, thus potentially generating truncated
protein forms. The Ubiquitin Proteasome System (UPS) is involved in the degradation of
proteins either by detecting specific amino acid sequence motifs (degrons) or by detecting
misfolding features of the protein. Degrons located at the c-terminal region of proteins
(c-degrons) potentiate a rapid degradation of proteins, however, their impact on the degradation
of proteins with truncated c-terminus remains unknown.
In this study, we employed two cancer datasets as natural experiments to study the degradation
of truncated proteins: a dataset of more than 600 primary tumor biopsies from the Clinical
Proteomics Tumor Analysis Consortium (CPTAC), and a dataset with more than 300
cancer-derived cell lines from CCLE with integrated genome, transcriptome and proteome
information. In order to select those mutations producing truncated proteins, we annotated the
NMD efficiency probability of all the PTCs in both datasets and classified them between
NMD-skipping or NMD-triggering. To our surprise, not only NMD-skipping but also
NMD-triggering showed decreased protein stability. We annotated all c-degrons instances in the
predicted truncated proteins and analysed the changes in protein stability, but no significant
differences nor tendencies were observed. We further explored whether the length of the
truncated protein could impact protein stability and yet that was the case for NMD-skipping
protein products but not for NMD-triggering, where protein stability decrease was independent
of the mutation localization in the protein.
In conclusion, c-degrons failed to explain the overall protein stability decrease of truncated
proteins. However, major protein sequence loss increases destabilisation but only for proteins
from NMD-skipping PTCs. Results presented in this study suggest that truncated proteins could
follow different degradation pathways depending on NMD efficiency.
Tipus de document
Treball fi de màster
Versió del document
Director/a: Serrat Jurado, Josep Maria
Llengua
Anglès
Paraules clau
Proteïnes -- Investigació
Pàgines
26 p.
Nota
Curs 2019-2020
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