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Item Characterizing the Unfolded Protein Response by Changes in Protein Thermal Stability(2023-09) McCracken, Neil Andrew; Mosley, Amber; Wek, Ron; Evans-Molina, Carmella; Georgiadis, Millie; Quinney, SaraThe Unfolded Protein Response (UPR) protects eukaryotic cells from the threat of excessive protein flux into the Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER). UPR sentries PERK, Ire1 and ATF6 detect unfolded protein in the ER and alert the cell of the condition. Downstream pathways increase translation of select responders while simultaneously decreasing the global protein load in order that toxic protein aggregates do not form in the cell. While this warning system has been characterized over several decades through extensive reporting of UPR impact on transcript and protein abundance, little is known about the biophysical changes that occur to proteins as part of the UPR in the context of the cellular environment. An understanding of how the UPR affects the folding, stability and protein oligomerization is vital for describing subtle but important changes that occur and contribute to maladaptive physiology in diseases including diabetes, cancer, and neurodegeneration. I propose that deficiencies in characterizing the UPR can be overcome by using thermal shifts assays (TSA) that quantify changes in protein stability post stimuli. Findings described herein show the utility of the biophysical thermal shift assay in characterizing the UPR. Thermal shift assays (TSA) measure susceptibility of proteins to denature upon heat treatment and consequently detect changes in protein structure, modification, and interactions in the cellular environment. Previously unobserved protein relationships related to the UPR were detected using TSA. These workflows were improved through more strategic upstream sampling and downstream data analysis through creation of the publicly available InflectSSP program. Observed UPR phenomena during N-linked glycosylation inhibition and UPR induction include protein degradation, changes in stability of N-linked glycosylation enzymes, and transcriptional targets canonical to the UPR. Stability changes in proteins downstream of PERK were also observed in experiments where PERK genetic ablation was combined with UPR induction. Finally, the thermal shift assay was used to develop a “signature” for the UPR that holistically describes the ER stress response. Results described in this dissertation provide an improved perspective of the UPR along with an approach that can be used to identify novel targets for therapeutic intervention of the UPR.