Translocation pathway of protein substrates in ClpAP protease

Takashi Ishikawa*, Fabienne Beuron, Martin Kessel, Sue Wickner, Michael R. Maurizi, Alasdair C. Steven

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

123 Scopus citations

Abstract

Intracellular protein degradation, which must be tightly controlled to protect normal proteins, is carried out by ATP-dependent proteases. These multicomponent enzymes have chaperone-like ATPases that recognize and unfold protein substrates and deliver them to the proteinase components for digestion. In ClpAP, hexameric rings of the ClpA ATPase stack axially on either face of the ClpP proteinase, which consists of two apposed heptameric rings. We have used cryoelectron microscopy to characterize interactions of ClpAP with the model substrate, bacteriophage P1 protein, RepA. In complexes stabilized by ATPγS, which bind but do not process substrate, RepA dimers are seen at near-axial sites on the distal surface of ClpA. On ATP addition, RepA is translocated through ≅150 Å into the digestion chamber inside ClpP. Little change is observed in CIpAP, implying that translocation proceeds without major reorganization of the ClpA hexamer. When translocation is observed in complexes containing a ClpP mutant whose digestion chamber is already occupied by unprocessed propeptides, a small increase in density is observed within ClpP, and RepA-associated density is also seen at other axial sites. These sites appear to represent intermediate points on the translocation pathway, at which segments of unfolded RepA subunits transiently accumulate en route to the digestion chamber.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4328-4333
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume98
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Apr 2001
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ATP-dependent protease
  • Chaperone
  • Cryoelectron microscopy
  • Processivity
  • Protein unfoldase

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