We investigate the question whether there is a (p-)optimal proof system for SAT or for TAUT and its relation to completeness
and collapse results for nondeterministic function classes. A p-optimal proof system for SAT is shown to imply (1) that there
exists a complete function for the class of all total nondeterministic multi-valued functions and (2) that any set with an
optimal proof system has a p-optimal proof system. By replacingthe assumption of the mere existence of a (p-) optimal proof
system by the assumption that certain proof systems are (p-)optimal we obtain stronger consequences, namely collapse results
for various function classes. Especially we investigate the question whether the standard proof system for SAT is p-optimal.
We show that this assumption is equivalent to a variety of complexity theoretical assertions studied before, and to the assumption
that every optimal proof system is p-optimal. Finally, we investigate whether there is an optimal proof system for TAUT that
admits an effective interpolation, and show some relations between various completeness assumptions.