RESUMO
BACKGROUND: The 20S proteasome is the proteolytic core of the major intracellular protein degradative system, the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Since little is known about proteasomes of human liver, we have investigated the proteasome spectrum in adult human liver. MATERIAL AND METHODS: 20S proteasomes were chromatographically purified from adult human liver and from HuH7 cells. They were divided into subpopulations and subtypes and characterized with regard to their proteolytic activities using short fluorogenic oligo- and long poly-peptide substrates. Their subunit composition was studied by immunoblotting. RESULTS: Proteasomes from adult human liver tissue can be separated into three subpopulations (I, II, III), each of which is composed of several subtypes, which total to a spectrum of 14 different subtypes. Two minor subtypes contain only the immuno-subunits ß1i and ß5i but not their standard counterparts; all others are intermediate subtypes containing ß1 and ß5 standard- and ß1i and ß5i immuno-subunits in various compositions. With regard to the proteolytic activities we observed that a decreasing content of subunit ß1i in the subtypes goes along with a decreasing ratio of chymotrypsin-like/caspase-like activity, whereas the degradation rate of a 30 mer polypeptide substrate increased with decreasing ß1i content. By comparison, 20S proteasomes from HuH7 cells do not contain immuno-subunits but are pure standard proteasomes, which can be separated into three subtypes. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that adult human liver contains a spectrum of 14 different 20S proteasome subtypes with different enzymatic properties reflecting most probably an adaptive response of liver cell functions to challenging factors during lifetime.
Assuntos
Eritrócitos/enzimologia , Fígado/enzimologia , Complexo de Endopeptidases do Proteassoma/metabolismo , Baço/enzimologia , Linhagem Celular , Eletroforese , HumanosRESUMO
Generally, Trypanosoma cruzi infection in human is persistent and tends to chronicity, suggesting that the parasite evade the immune surveillance by down regulating the intracellular antigen processing routes. Within the MHC class I pathway, the majority of antigenic peptides are generated by the proteasome. However, upon IFN-γ stimulation, the catalytic constitutive subunits of the proteasome are replaced by the subunits ß1i/LMP2, ß2i/MECL-1 and ß5i/LMP7 to form the immunoproteasome. In this scenario, we analyzed whether the expression and activity of the constitutive and the immunoproteasome as well as the expression of other components of the MHC class I pathway are altered during the infection of HeLa cells with T. cruzi. By RT-PCR and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis, we showed that the expression and composition of the constitutive proteasome is not affected by the parasite. In contrast, the biosynthesis of the ß1i, ß2i, ß5i immunosubunits, PA28ß, TAP1 and the MHC class I molecule as well as the proteasomal proteolytic activities were down-regulated in infected-IFN-γ-treated cell cultures. Taken together, our results provide evidence that the protozoan T. cruzi specifically modulates its infection through an unknown posttranscriptional mechanism that inhibits the expression of the MHC class I pathway components.