首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
A DNA fragment encoding Bacillus licheniformis GrpE (BlGrpE) with double mutations at codons 52 and 134 was obtained during PCR cloning. Leu52 and Leu134 in BlGrpE were individually replaced with Pro and His to generate BlGrpE-L52P and BlGrpE-L134H. BlGrpE and BlGrpE-L52P synergistically stimulated the ATPase activity of B. licheniformis DnaK (BlDnaK); however, BlGrpE-L134H and the double-mutated protein (BlGrpE-L52P/L134H) had no co-chaperone function. BlGrpE, BlGrpE-L52P, and BlGrpE-L134H mainly interacted with the monomer of BlDnaK but non-specific interaction was observed for BlGrpE-L52P/L134H. Measurement of intrinsic fluorescence revealed a significant alteration of the microenvironment of aromatic acid residues in the mutant proteins. As compared with BlGrpE, quenching of 208-nm and 222-nm signals were observed in the mutant BlGrpEs and the single-mutated proteins were more sensitive to thermal denaturation.  相似文献   

2.
Bacillus licheniformis DnaK (BlDnaK) is predicted to consist of a 45-kDa N-terminal ATPase domain and a 25-kDa C-terminal substrate-binding domain. In this study, the full-length BlDnaK and its T86W and three C-terminally truncated mutants were constructed to evaluate the role of up to C-terminal 255 amino acids of the protein. The steady-state ATPase activity for BlDnaK, T86W, T86W/ΔC120, T86W/ΔC249, and T86W/ΔC255 was 65.68, 53.21, 116.04, 321.38, and 90.59 nmol Pi/min per mg, respectively. In vivo, BldnaK, T86W and T86W/ΔC120 genes allowed an E. coli dnaK756-ts mutant to grow at 44°C. Except for T86W/ΔC255, simultaneous addition of B. licheniformis DnaJ and GrpE, and NR-peptide synergistically stimulated the ATPase activity of BlDnaK, T86W, T86W/ΔC120, and T86W/ΔC249 by 16.9-, 13.9-, 33.9-, 9.9-fold, respectively. Measurement of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence revealed significant alterations of microenvironment of aromatic amino acids in the C-terminally truncated mutants. The temperature-dependent signal in the far-UV region for T86W was consistent with that of BlDnaK, but the C-terminally truncated mutant proteins showed a higher sensitivity toward temperature-induced denaturation. These results suggest that C-terminal truncations alter the ATPase activity and thermal stability of BlDnaK and induce the conformation change of the ATPase domain. Wan-Chi Liang and Min-Guan Lin contributed equally to this work.  相似文献   

3.
The heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70/DnaK) gene of Bacillus licheniformis is 1,839 bp in length encoding a polypeptide of 612 amino acid residues. The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene shares high sequence identity with other Hsp70/DnaK proteins. The characteristic domains typical for Hsps/DnaKs are also well conserved in B. licheniformis DnaK (BlDnaK). BlDnaK was overexpressed in Escherichia coli using pQE expression system and the recombinant protein was purified to homogeneity by nickel-chelate chromatography. The optimal temperature for ATPase activity of the purified BlDnaK was 40°C in the presence of 100 mM KCl. The purified BlDnaK had a V max of 32.5 nmol Pi/min and a K M of 439 μM. In vivo, the dnaK gene allowed an E. coli dnaK756-ts mutant to grow at 44°C, suggesting that BlDnaK should be functional for survival of host cells under environmental changes especially higher temperature. We also described the use of circular dichroism to characterize the conformation change induced by ATP binding. Binding of ATP was not accompanied by a net change in secondary structure, but ATP together with Mg2+ and K+ ions had a greater enhancement in the stability of BlDnaK at stress temperatures. Simultaneous addition of DnaJ, GrpE, and NR-peptide (NRLLLTG) synergistically stimulates the ATPase activity of BlDnaK by 11.7-fold.  相似文献   

4.
GrpE is the nucleotide-exchange factor of the DnaK chaperone system. Escherichia coli cells with the classical temperature-sensitive grpE280 phenotype do not grow under heat-shock conditions and have been found to carry the G122D point mutation in GrpE. To date, the molecular mechanism of this defect has not been investigated in detail. Here, we examined the structural and functional properties of isolated GrpE(G122D) in vitro. Similar to wild-type GrpE, GrpE(G122D) is an elongated dimer in solution. Compared to wild-type GrpE, GrpE(G122D) catalyzed the ADP/ATP exchange in DnaK only marginally and did not compete with wild-type GrpE in interacting with DnaK. In the presence of ADP, GrpE(G122D) in contrast to wild-type GrpE, did not form a complex with DnaK detectable by size-exclusion chromatography with on-line static light-scattering and differential refractometry. Apparently, GrpE(G122D) in the presence of ADP binds to DnaK only with much lower affinity than wild-type GrpE. GrpE(G122D) could not substitute for wild-type GrpE in the refolding of denatured proteins by the DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE chaperone system. In the crystal structure of a (Delta1-33)GrpE(G122D).DnaK-ATPase complex, which as yet is the only available structure of a GrpE variant, Asp122 does not interact directly with neighboring residues of GrpE or DnaK. The far-UV circular dichroism spectra of mutant and wild-type GrpE proved slightly different. Possibly, a discrete change in conformation impairs the formation of the complex with DnaK and renders GrpE(G122D) virtually inactive as a nucleotide exchange factor. In view of the drastically reduced ADP/ATP-exchange activity of GrpE(G122D), the heat sensitivity of grpE280 cells might be explained by the ensuing slowing of the chaperone cycle and the increased sequestering of target proteins by high-affinity, ADP-liganded DnaK, both effects being incompatible with efficient chaperone action required for cell growth.  相似文献   

5.
GrpE acts as a nucleotide exchange factor for DnaK, the main Hsp70 protein in bacteria, accelerating ADP/ATP exchange by several orders of magnitude. GrpE is a homodimer, each subunit containing three structural domains: a N-terminal unordered segment, two long coils and a C-terminal globular domain formed by a four-helix bundle, and a β-subdomain. GrpE association to DnaK nucleotide-binding domain involves side-chain and backbone interactions located within the “headpiece” of the cochaperone, which consists of the C-terminal half of the coils, the four-helix bundle and the β-subdomain. However, the role of the GrpE N-terminal region in the interaction with DnaK and the activity of the cochaperone remain controversial. In this study we explore the contribution of this domain to the binding reaction, using the wild-type proteins, two deletion mutants of GrpE (GrpE34-197 and GrpE69-197) and the isolated DnaK nucleotide-binding domain. Analysis of the thermodynamic binding parameters obtained by isothermal titration calorimetry shows that both GrpE N-terminal segments, 1-33 and 34-68, contribute to the binding reaction. Partial proteolysis and substrate dissociation kinetics also suggest that the N-terminal half of GrpE coils (residues 34-68) interacts with DnaK interdomain linker, regulates the nucleotide exchange activity of the cochaperone and is required to stabilize DnaK-substrate complexes in the ADP-bound conformation.  相似文献   

6.
The nucleotide binding and release cycle of the molecular chaperone DnaK is regulated by the accessory proteins GrpE and DnaJ, also called co-chaperones. The concerted action of the nucleotide exchange factor GrpE and the ATPase-stimulating factor DnaJ determines the ratio of the two nucleotide states of DnaK, which differ in their mode of interaction with unfolded proteins. In the Escherichia coli system, the stimulation by these two antagonists is comparable in magnitude, resulting in a balance of the two nucleotide states of DnaK(Eco) in the absence and the presence of co-chaperones.The regulation of the DnaK chaperone system from Thermus thermophilus is apparently substantially different. Here, DnaJ does not stimulate the DnaK-mediated ATP hydrolysis and thus does not appear to act as an antagonist of the nucleotide exchange factor GrpE(Tth). This raises the question of whether T. thermophilus GrpE stimulates nucleotide exchange to a smaller degree as compared to the E. coli system and how the corresponding rates relate to intrinsic ATPase and ATP binding as well as luciferase refolding kinetics of T. thermophilus DnaK.We determined dissociation constants as well as kinetic constants that describe the interactions between the T. thermophilus molecular chaperone DnaK, its nucleotide exchange factor GrpE and the fluorescent ADP analogue N8-(4-N'-methylanthraniloylaminobutyl)-8-aminoadenosine-5'-diphosphate by isothermal equilibrium titration calorimetry and stopped-flow kinetic experiments and investigated the influence of T. thermophilus DnaJ on the DnaK nucleotide cycle.The interaction of GrpE with the DnaK.ADP complex versus nucleotide-free DnaK can be described by a simple equilibrium system, where GrpE reduces the affinity of DnaK for ADP by a factor of about 10. Kinetic experiments indicate that the maximal acceleration of nucleotide release by GrpE is 80,000-fold at a saturating GrpE concentration.Our experiments show that in T. thermophilus, although the thermophilic DnaK system displays no stimulation of the DnaK-ATPase activity by DnaJ, nucleotide exchange is still efficiently stimulated by GrpE. This indicates that two counteracting factors are not absolutely necessary to maintain a functional and regulated chaperone cycle. This conclusion is corroborated by data that show that the slower ATPase cycle of the DnaK system as well as of heterologous T. thermophilus DnaK/E. coli DnaK systems is directly reflected in altered refolding kinetics of firefly luciferase but not necessarily in refolding yields.  相似文献   

7.
Based on the sequence homology, we have modeled the three-dimensional structure of Bacillus licheniformis aldehyde dehydrogenase (BlALDH) and identified two different residues, Glu255 and Cys289, that might be responsible for the catalytic function of the enzyme. The role of these residues was further investigated by site-directed mutagenesis and biophysical analysis. The expressed parental and mutant proteins were purified by nickel-chelate chromatography, and their molecular masses were determined to be approximately 53 kDa by SDS-PAGE. As compared with the parental BlALDH, a dramatic decrease or even complete loss of the dehydrogenase activity was observed for the mutant enzymes. Structural analysis showed that the intrinsic fluorescence and circular dichroism spectra of the mutant proteins were similar to the parental enzyme, but most of the variants exhibited a different sensitivity towards thermal- and guanidine hydrochloride-induced denaturation. These observations indicate that residues Glu255 and Cys289 play an important role in the dehydrogenase activity of BlALDH, and the rigidity of the enzyme has been changed as a consequence of the mutations.  相似文献   

8.
Many of the functions of the Escherichia coli Hsp 70, DnaK, require two cofactors, DnaJ and GrpE. GrpE acts as a nucleotide exchange factor in the DnaK reaction cycle but the details of its mechanism remain unclear. GrpE has high affinity for monomeric native DnaK, with a Kd estimated at ≤50 nM. GrpE is a very asymmetric molecule and exists as either a dimer or trimer in its native state. The stoichiometry of GrpE to DnaK in the isolated complex was 3:1, suggesting a trimer. Formation of the complex is quite fast (kon >1 S−1, whereas the off-rate is very slow on the HPLC timescale (koff ≤ 10−4 S−1). GrpE has no affinity for ATP or ADP, nor the oligomeric and moltn globule states of DnaK. The complex is much more thermally stable than either GrpE or DnaK alone, and prevents the formation of the molten globule-like state of DnaK at physiologically relevant temperatures. Formation of the complex does not cause any change in secondary structure, as determined by the lack of change in the circular dichroism spectrum. However, binding of GrpE induces a similar tertiary strcutral change in DnaK to that induced by binding of ATP1 based on the blue shift in λmax from the fluroscence of the single tryptophan in DnaK. The nucleotide exchange properties of GrpE can be explained by the conformational change which may represent the opening of the nucleotide cleft on DnaK, subsequently inducing a low affinity state for ADP.  相似文献   

9.
A homodimeric GrpE protein functions as a nucleotide exchange factor of the eubacterium DnaK molecular chaperone system. The co-chaperone GrpE accelerates ADP dissociation from, and promotes ATP binding to, DnaK, which cooperatively facilitates the DnaK chaperone cycle with another co-chaperone, DnaJ. GrpE characteristically undergoes two-step conformational changes in response to elevation of the environmental temperature. In the first transition at heat-shock temperatures, a fully reversible and functionally deficient structural alteration takes place in GrpE, and then the higher temperatures lead to the irreversible dissociation of the GrpE dimer into monomers as the second transition. GrpE is also thought to be a thermosensor of the DnaK system, since it is the only member of the DnaK system that changes its structure reversibly and loses its function at heat-shock temperatures of various organisms. We here report the crystal structure of GrpE from Thermus thermophilus HB8 (GrpETth) at 3.23 Å resolution. The resolved structure is compared with that of GrpE from mesophilic Escherichia coli (GrpEEco), revealing structural similarities, particularly in the DnaK interaction regions, and structural characteristics for the thermal stability of GrpETth. In addition, the structure analysis raised the possibility that the polypeptide chain in the reported GrpEEco structure was misinterpreted. Comparison of these two GrpE structures combined with the results of limited proteolysis experiments provides insight into the protein dynamics of GrpETth correlated with the shift of temperature, and also suggests that the localized and partial unfolding at the plausible DnaK interaction sites of GrpETth causes functional deficiency of nucleotide exchange factor in response to the heat shock.  相似文献   

10.
In addition to the sigma(32)-mediated heat shock response, the DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE molecular chaperone system of Escherichia coli directly adapts to elevated temperatures by sequestering a higher fraction of substrate. This immediate heat shock response is due to the differential temperature dependence of the activity of DnaJ, which stimulates the hydrolysis of DnaK-bound ATP, and the activity of GrpE, which facilitates ADP/ATP exchange and converts DnaK from its high-affinity ADP-liganded state into its low-affinity ATP-liganded state. GrpE acts as thermosensor with its ADP/ATP exchange activity decreasing above 40 degrees C. To assess the importance of this reversible thermal adaptation for the chaperone action of the DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE system during heat shock, we used glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and luciferase as substrates. We compared the performance of wild-type GrpE as a component of the chaperone system with that of GrpE R40C. In this mutant, the thermosensing helices are stabilized with an intersubunit disulfide bond and its nucleotide exchange activity thus increases continuously with increasing temperature. Wild-type GrpE with intact thermosensor proved superior to GrpE R40C with desensitized thermosensor. The chaperone system with wild-type GrpE yielded not only a higher fraction of refolding-competent protein at the end of a heat shock but also protected luciferase more efficiently against inactivation during heat shock. Consistent with their differential thermal behavior, the protective effects of wild-type GrpE and GrpE R40C diverged more and more with increasing temperature. Thus, the direct thermal adaptation of the DnaK chaperone system by thermosensing GrpE is essential for efficient chaperone action during heat shock.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli is widely employed to produce recombinant proteins because this microorganism is simple to manipulate, inexpensive to culture, and of short duration to produce a recombinant protein. However, contamination of molecular chaperone DnaK during purification of the recombinant protein is sometimes a problem, since DnaK sometimes has a negative effect on subsequent experiments. Previously, several efforts have been done to remove the DnaK contaminants by several sequential chromatography or washing with some expensive chemicals such as ATP. Here, we developed a simple and inexpensive method to express and purify recombinant proteins based on an E. coli dnaK-deletion mutant. The E. coli ΔdnaK52 mutant was infected by λDE3 phage to overexpress desired recombinant proteins under the control of T7 promoter. Using this host cell, recombinant hexa histidine-tag fused GrpE, which is well known as a co-chaperone for DnaK and to strongly interact with DnaK, was overexpressed and purified by one-step nickel affinity chromatography. As a result, highly purified recombinant GrpE was obtained without washing with ATP. The purified recombinant GrpE showed a folded secondary structure and a dimeric structure as previous findings. In vitro ATPase activity assay and luciferase-refolding activity assay demonstrated that the recombinant GrpE worked together with DnaK. Thus, this developed method would be rapid and useful for expression and purification of recombinant proteins which is difficult to remove DnaK contaminants.  相似文献   

12.
DnaK, the prokaryotic Hsp70 molecular chaperone, requires the nucleotide exchange factor and heat shock protein GrpE to release ADP. GrpE and DnaK are tightly associated molecules with an extensive protein-protein interface, and in the absence of ADP, the dissociation constant for GrpE and DnaK is in the low nanomolar range. GrpE reduces the affinity of DnaK for ADP, and the reciprocal linkage is also true: ADP reduces the affinity of DnaK for GrpE. The energetic contributions of GrpE side-chains to GrpE-DnaK binding were probed by alanine-scanning mutagenesis. Sedimentation velocity (SV) analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC) was used to measure the equilibrium constants (Keq) for GrpE binding to the ATPase domain of DnaK in the presence of ADP. ADP-bound DnaK is the natural target of GrpE, and the addition of ADP (final concentration of 5 microM) to the preformed GrpE-DnaK(ATPase) complexes allowed the equilibrium association constants to be brought into an experimentally accessible range. Under these experimental conditions, the substitution of one single GrpE amino acid residue, arginine 183 with alanine, resulted in a GrpE-DnaK(ATPase) complex that was weakly associated (Keq =9.4 x 10(4) M). This residue has been previously shown to be part of a thermodynamic linkage between two structural domains of GrpE: the thermosensing long helices and the C-terminal beta-domains. Several other GrpE side-chains were found to have a significant change in the free energy of binding (DeltaDeltaG approximately 1.5 to 1.7 kcal mol(-1)), compared to wild-type GrpE.DnaK(ATPase) in the same experimental conditions. Overall, the strong interactions between GrpE and DnaK appear to be dominated by electrostatics, not unlike barnase and barstar, another well-characterized protein-protein interaction. GrpE, an inherent thermosensor, exhibits non-Arrhenius behavior with respect to its nucleotide exchange function at bacterial heat shock temperatures, and mutation of several solvent-exposed side-chains located along the thermosensing indicated that these residues are indeed important for GrpE-DnaK interactions.  相似文献   

13.
The DnaK chaperone of Escherichia coli assists protein folding by an ATP-dependent interaction with short peptide stretches within substrate polypeptides. This interaction is regulated by the DnaJ and GrpE co-chaperones, which stimulate ATP hydrolysis and nucleotide exchange by DnaK, respectively. Furthermore, GrpE has been claimed to trigger substrate release independent of its role as a nucleotide exchange factor. However, we show here that GrpE can accelerate substrate release from DnaK exclusively in the presence of ATP. In addition, GrpE prevented the association of peptide substrates with DnaK through an activity of its N-terminal 33 amino acids. A ternary complex of GrpE, DnaK, and a peptide substrate could be observed only when the peptide binding to DnaK precedes GrpE binding. Furthermore, we demonstrate that GrpE slows down the release of a protein substrate, sigma(32), from DnaK in the absence of ATP. These findings suggest that the ATP-triggered dissociation of GrpE and substrates from DnaK occurs in a concerted fashion.  相似文献   

14.
The Escherichia coli Hsp40 DnaJ uses its J-domain (Jd) to couple ATP hydrolysis and client protein capture in Hsp70 DnaK. Fusion of the Jd to peptide p5 (as in Jdp5) dramatically increases the apparent affinity of the p5 moiety for DnaK in the presence of ATP, and Jdp5 stimulates ATP hydrolysis in DnaK by several orders of magnitude. NMR experiments with [15N]Jdp5 demonstrated that the peptide tethers the Jd to the ATPase domain. Thus, ATP hydrolysis and client protein binding in DnaK are coupled principally through the association of the client with DnaJ. Overexpression of a recombinant Jd was specifically toxic to cells that simultaneously expressed DnaK. No toxicity was observed when overexpressing Jdp5 or mutant Jd or when co-overexpressing the Jd and the nucleotide exchange factor GrpE. The results suggest that the Jd shifts DnaK to a client-bound form by stimulating the DnaK ATPase but only when the Jd is brought to DnaK by a client-Hsp40 complex.  相似文献   

15.
B Wu  A Wawrzynow  M Zylicz    C Georgopoulos 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(18):4806-4816
We have isolated various missense mutations in the essential grpE gene of Escherichia coli based on the inability to propagate bacteriophage lambda. To better understand the biochemical mechanisms of GrpE action in various biological processes, six mutant proteins were overexpressed and purified. All of them, GrpE103, GrpE66, GrpE2/280, GrpE17, GrpE13a and GrpE25, have single amino acid substitutions located in highly conserved regions throughout the GrpE sequence. The biochemical defects of each mutant GrpE protein were identified by examining their abilities to: (i) support in vitro lambda DNA replication; (ii) stimulate the weak ATPase activity of DnaK; (iii) dimerize and oligomerize, as judged by glutaraldehyde crosslinking and HPLC size chromatography; (iv) interact with wild-type DnaK protein using either an ELISA assay, glutaraldehyde crosslinking or HPLC size chromatography. Our results suggest that GrpE can exist in a dimeric or oligomeric form, depending on its relative concentration, and that it dimerizes/oligomerizes through its N-terminal region, most likely through a computer predicted coiled-coil region. Analysis of several mutant GrpE proteins indicates that an oligomer of GrpE is the most active form that interacts stably with DnaK and that the interaction is vital for GrpE biological function. Our results also demonstrate that both the N-terminal and C-terminal regions are important for GrpE function in lambda DNA replication and its co-chaperone activity with DnaK.  相似文献   

16.
The cochaperone GrpE functions as a nucleotide exchange factor to promote dissociation of adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) from the nucleotide-binding cleft of DnaK. GrpE and the DnaJ cochaperone act in concert to control the flux of unfolded polypeptides into and out of the substrate-binding domain of DnaK by regulating the nucleotide-bound state of DnaK. DnaJ stimulates nucleotide hydrolysis, and GrpE promotes the exchange of ADP for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and also augments peptide release from the DnaK substrate-binding domain in an ATP-independent manner. The eukaryotic cytosol does not contain GrpE per se because GrpE-like function is provided by the BAG1 protein, which acts as a nucleotide exchange factor for cytosolic Hsp70s. GrpE, which plays a prominent role in mitochondria, chloroplasts, and bacterial cytoplasms, is a fascinating molecule with an unusual quaternary structure. The long alpha-helices of GrpE have been hypothesized to act as a thermosensor and to be involved in the decrease in GrpE-dependent nucleotide exchange that is observed in vitro at temperatures relevant to heat shock. This review describes the molecular biology of GrpE and focuses on the structural and kinetic aspects of nucleotide exchange, peptide release, and the thermosensor hypothesis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Temperature directly controls functional properties of the DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE chaperone system. The rate of the high to low affinity conversion of DnaK shows a non-Arrhenius temperature dependence and above approximately 40 degrees C even decreases. In the same temperature range, the ADP/ATP exchange factor GrpE undergoes an extensive, fully reversible thermal transition (Grimshaw, J. P. A., Jelesarov, I., Sch?nfeld, H. J., and Christen, P. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 6098-6104). To show that this transition underlies the thermal regulation of the chaperone system, we introduced an intersubunit disulfide bond into the paired long helices of the GrpE dimer. The transition was absent in disulfide-linked GrpE R40C but was restored by reduction. With disulfide-stabilized GrpE, the rate of ADP/ATP exchange and conversion of DnaK from its ADP-liganded high affinity R state to the ATP-liganded low affinity T state continuously increased with increasing temperature. With reduced GrpE R40C, the conversion became slower at temperatures >40 degrees C, as observed with wild-type GrpE. Thus, the long helix pair in the GrpE dimer acts as a thermosensor that, by decreasing its ADP/ATP exchange activity, induces a shift of the DnaK.substrate complexes toward the high affinity R state and in this way adapts the DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE system to heat shock conditions.  相似文献   

19.
A key feature to the dimeric structure for the GrpE heat shock protein is the pair of long helices at the NH(2)-terminal end followed by a presumable extended segment of about 30 amino acids from each monomer. We have constructed a GrpE deletion mutant protein that contains only the unique tail portion (GrpE1-89) and another that is missing this region (GrpE88-197). Circular dichroism analysis shows that the GrpE1-89 mutant still contains one-third percent alpha-helical secondary structure. Using an assay that measures bound peptide to DnaK we show that the GrpE1-89 is able to lower the amount of bound peptide, whereas GrpE88-197 has no effect. Additionally, when the same peptide binding assay is carried out with the COOH-terminal domain of DnaK, the full-length GrpE and the two GrpE deletion mutants show little to no effect on peptide release. Furthermore, the GrpE88-197 mutant is able to enhance the off-rate of nucleotide from DnaK and the 1-89 mutant has no effect on the nucleotide release. Similar results of nucleotide release are observed with the NH(2)-terminal ATPase domain mutant of DnaK. The results presented show directly that there is interaction between the GrpE protein's "tail" region and the substrate COOH-terminal peptide binding domain of DnaK, although the effect is only fully manifest with an intact full-length DnaK molecule.  相似文献   

20.
Function of Hsp70s such as DnaK of the Escherichia coli cytoplasm and Ssc1 of the mitochondrial matrix of Saccharomyces cerevisiae requires the nucleotide release factors, GrpE and Mge1, respectively. A loop, which protrudes from domain IA of the DnaK ATPase domain, is one of six sites of interaction revealed in the GrpE:DnaK co-crystal structure and has been implicated as a functionally important site in both DnaK and Ssc1. Alanine substitutions for the amino acids (Lys-108 and Arg-213 of Mge1) predicted to interact with the Hsp70 loop were analyzed. Mge1 having both substitutions was able to support growth in the absence of the essential wild-type protein. K108A/R213A Mge1 was able to stimulate nucleotide release from Ssc1 and function in refolding of denatured luciferase, albeit higher concentrations of mutant protein than wild-type protein were required. In vitro and in vivo assays using K108A/R213A Mge1 and Ssc1 indicated that the disruption of contact at this site destabilized the interaction between the two proteins. We propose that the direct interaction between the loop of Ssc1 and Mge1 is not required to effect nucleotide release but plays a role in stabilization of the Mge1-Ssc1 interaction. The robust growth of the K108A/R213A MGE1 mutant suggests that the interaction between Mge1 and Ssc1 is tighter than required for function in vivo.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号