Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Proteome plasticity in response to persistent environmental change.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

August 19, 2021

Journal

Molecular cell

Volume/Issue

81/16

ISSN

1097-4164

Temperature is a variable component of the environment, and all organisms must deal with or adapt to temperature change. Acute temperature change activates cellular stress responses, resulting in refolding or removal of damaged proteins. However, how organisms adapt to long-term temperature change remains largely unexplored. Here we report that budding yeast responds to long-term high temperature challenge by switching from chaperone induction to reduction of temperature-sensitive proteins and re-localizing a portion of its proteome. Surprisingly, we also find that many proteins adopt an alternative conformation. Using Fet3p as an example, we find that the temperature-dependent conformational difference is accompanied by distinct thermostability, subcellular localization, and, importantly, cellular functions. We postulate that, in addition to the known mechanisms of adaptation, conformational plasticity allows some polypeptides to acquire new biophysical properties and functions when environmental change endures.

Alternate Journal

Mol Cell

PubMed ID

34293321

PubMed Central ID

PMC8475771

Authors

Matthew Domnauer
Fan Zheng
Liying Li
Yanxiao Zhang
Catherine E Chang
Jay R Unruh
Juliana Conkright-Fincham
Scott McCroskey
Laurence Florens
Ying Zhang
Christopher Seidel
Benjamin Fong
Birgit Schilling
Rishi Sharma
Arvind Ramanathan
Kausik Si
Chuankai Zhou

Keywords

Acclimatization
Environmental Exposure
Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal
Hot Temperature
Saccharomycetales
Animals
Stress, Physiological
Adaptation, Physiological
Proteome
Transcriptome