In addition to its thirty or so core subunits, a number of accessory proteins associate with the 26 S proteasome presumably to assist in substrate degradation or to localize the enzyme within cells. Among these proteins is ecm29p, a 200-kBa yeast protein that contains numerous HEAT repeats as well as a putative VHS domain. Higher eukaryotes possess a well conserved homolog of yeast ecm29p, and we produced antibodies to three peptides in the human Ecm29 sequence. The antibodies show that Ecm29 is present exclusively on 26 S proteasomes in HeLa cells and that Ecm29 levels vary markedly among mouse organs. Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy localizes Ecm29 to the centrosome and a subset of secretory compartments including endosomes, the ER and the ERGIC. Ecm29 is up-regulated 2-3-fold in toxin-resistant mutant CHO cells exhibiting increased rates of ER-associated degradation. Based on these results we propose that Ecm29 serves to couple the 26 S proteasome to secretory compartments engaged in quality control and to other sites of enhanced proteolysis.
CITATION STYLE
Gorbea, C., Goellner, G. M., Teter, K., Holmes, R. K., & Rechsteiner, M. (2004). Characterization of mammalian Ecm29, a 26 S proteasome-associated protein that localizes to the nucleus and membrane vesicles. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(52), 54849–54861. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M410444200
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