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Research article2013Peer reviewedOpen access

Pitfalls in invertebrate proteasome assays

Goetze, Sandra; Bose, Aneesh; Abele, Doris; Sokolova, Inna M.; Saborowski, Reinhard

Abstract

The ubiquitin-proteasome system controls a variety of essential intracellular processes through directed protein turnover. The invertebrate proteasome has recently gained increasing interest with respect to central physiological processes and pathways in different taxa. A pitfall in proteasome activity assays, represented by the trypsin-like, chymotrypsin-like or caspase-like site, lies in the fact that most commonly used experimental substrates are susceptible to degradation by non-proteasomal proteolytic enzymes, which can lead to erroneous interpretation of activity data obtained. Through the use of a proteasome-specific inhibitor, epoxomicin, we showed that the shares of proteasomal and non-proteasomal activities in the degradation of a model polypeptide substrate for chymotrypsin-like activity vary considerably between invertebrate taxa. Crustacean muscle tissue and hemocytes showed almost exclusively proteasomal activity. In yeast, approximately 90% of total proteolytic activity can be attributed to the proteasome. In contrast, proteasomal activity comprises only 20-60% of the total proteolytic activity in bivalve tissues. These results reveal that, without verification of the shares of proteasomal and non-proteasomal activities in crude extracts through the use of highly specific inhibitors, common proteasomal enzyme assays should be used and interpreted with caution.

Keywords

proteasome; bivalve; Crustacea; epoxomicin; protein catabolism

Published in

Journal of Experimental Biology
2013, Volume: 216, number: 8, pages: 1351-1354

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.082792

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/119527