Unfolding knots by proteasome-like systems: simulations of the behaviour of folded and neurotoxic proteins
Micha{\l} Wojciechowski, \`Angel G\'omez-Sicilia, Mariano, Carri\'on-V\'azquez, Marek Cieplak

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how knotted proteins hinder proteasomal degradation, potentially leading to neurotoxicity, and highlights the impact of knots on protein translocation and disease mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces dynamical models of the proteasome to analyze how protein knots affect degradation, revealing their potential role in neurodegenerative diseases.
Findings
Knots can jam proteasomal translocation.
The likelihood of hindrance depends on protein and force parameters.
Knotted proteins may contribute to toxicity in neurodegeneration.
Abstract
Knots in proteins have been proposed to resist proteasomal degradation. Ample evidence associates proteasomal degradation with neurodegeneration. One interesting possibility is that indeed knotted conformers stall this machinery leading to toxicity. However, although the proteasome is known to unfold mechanically its substrates, at present there are no experimental methods to emulate this particular traction geometry. Here, we consider several dynamical models of the proteasome in which the complex is represented by an effective potential with an added pulling force. This force is meant to induce translocation of a protein or a polypeptide into the catalytic chamber. The force is either constant or applied periodically. The translocated proteins are modelled in a coarse-grained fashion. We do comparative analysis of several knotted globular proteins and the transiently knotted…
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