Structures of dynamic interactors at native proteasomes by PhIX-MS and cryoelectron microscopy
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Proteasome function depends on a network of transient interactions that remain structurally and functionally unresolved. We developed PhIX-MS (Photo-induced In situ Crosslinking-Mass Spectrometry), a structural proteomics workflow that stabilizes transient interactions in cells by UV-activated crosslinking to capture topological information. Applying PhIX-MS with cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), we mapped redox sensor TXNL1 at the proteasome regulatory particle (RP), placing its PITH domain above deubiquitinase RPN11 and resolving its dynamic thioredoxin domain near RPN2/PSMD1 and RPN13/ADRM1, ideally located to reduce substrates prior to proteolysis. We also resolved chaperone PSMD5 bound to RP without the proteolytic core particle (CP) where its C-terminus inserts into the ATPase pore blocking CP binding. PhIX-MS and AlphaFold modeling tether ubiquitin ligase UBE3C/Hul5 along the RP placing its catalytic site above the RPN11 active site, enabling their coupled activities. Our integrative approach enables the localization of native, low-affinity protein interactions and is broadly applicable to dynamic macromolecular assemblies.