Cell-wide analysis of protein thermal unfolding reveals determinants of thermostability.
Pascal LeuenbergerStefan GanschaAlexandre ThiéryValentina CappellettiPaul J BoersemaChristian von MeringManfred ClaassenPaola PicottiPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2017)
Temperature-induced cell death is thought to be due to protein denaturation, but the determinants of thermal sensitivity of proteomes remain largely uncharacterized. We developed a structural proteomic strategy to measure protein thermostability on a proteome-wide scale and with domain-level resolution. We applied it to Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Thermus thermophilus, and human cells, yielding thermostability data for more than 8000 proteins. Our results (i) indicate that temperature-induced cellular collapse is due to the loss of a subset of proteins with key functions, (ii) shed light on the evolutionary conservation of protein and domain stability, and (iii) suggest that natively disordered proteins in a cell are less prevalent than predicted and (iv) that highly expressed proteins are stable because they are designed to tolerate translational errors that would lead to the accumulation of toxic misfolded species.
Keyphrases
- escherichia coli
- cell death
- protein protein
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- high glucose
- amino acid
- single cell
- cell therapy
- binding protein
- small molecule
- emergency department
- gene expression
- diabetic rats
- staphylococcus aureus
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- dna methylation
- machine learning
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- genetic diversity