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1.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the Escherichia coli dnaK and grpE genes code for heat shock proteins. Both the Dnak and GrpE proteins are necessary for bacteriophage lambda DNA replication and for E. coli growth at all temperatures. Through a series of genetic and biochemical experiments, we have shown that these heat shock proteins functionally interact both in vivo and in vitro. The genetic evidence is based on the isolation of mutations in the dnaK gene, such as dnaK9 and dnaK90, which suppress the Tr- phenotype of bacteria carrying the grpE280 mutation. Coimmunoprecipitation of DnaK+ and GrpE+ proteins from cell lysates with anti-DnaK antibodies demonstrated their interaction in vitro. In addition, the DnaK756 and GrpE280 mutant proteins did not coimmunoprecipitate efficiently with the GrpE+ and DnaK+ proteins, respectively, suggesting that interaction between the DnaK and GrpE proteins is necessary for E. coli growth, at least at temperatures above 43 degrees C. Using this assay, we found that one of the dnaK suppressor mutations, dnaK9, reinstated a protein-protein interaction between the suppressor DnaK9 and GrpE280 proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Three Escherichia coli heat shock proteins, DnaJ, DnaK, and GrpE, are required for replication of the bacteriophage lambda chromosome in vivo. We show that the GrpE heat shock protein is not required for initiation of lambda DNA replication in vitro when the concentration of DnaK is sufficiently high. GrpE does, however, greatly potentiate the action of DnaK in the initiation process when the DnaK concentration is reduced to a subsaturating level. We demonstrate in the accompanying articles (Alfano, C. and McMacken, R. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 10699-10708; Dodson, M., McMacken, R., and Echols, H. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 10719-10725) that DnaJ and DnaK bind to prepriming nucleoprotein structures that are assembled at the lambda replication origin (ori lambda). Binding of DnaJ and DnaK completes the ordered assembly of an ori lambda initiation complex that also contains the lambda O and P initiators and the E. coli DnaB helicase. With the addition of ATP, the DnaJ and DnaK heat shock proteins mediate the partial disassembly of the initiation complex, and the P and DnaJ proteins are largely removed from the template. Concomitantly, on supercoiled ori lambda plasmid templates, the intrinsic helicase activity of DnaB is activated and DnaB initiates localized unwinding of the DNA duplex, thereby preparing the template for priming and DNA chain elongation. We infer from our results that DnaK and DnaJ function in normal E. coli metabolism to promote ATP-dependent protein unfolding and disassembly reactions. We also provide evidence that neither the lambda O and P initiators nor the E. coli DnaJ and DnaK heat shock proteins play a direct role in the propagation of lambda replication forks in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
DnaK/Hsp70 proteins are universally conserved ATP-dependent molecular chaperones that help proteins adopt and maintain their native conformations. DnaJ/Hsp40 and GrpE are co-chaperones that assist DnaK. CbpA is an Escherichia coli DnaJ homolog. It acts as a multicopy suppressor for dnaJ mutations and functions in vitro in combination with DnaK and GrpE in protein remodeling reactions. CbpA binds nonspecifically to DNA with preference for curved DNA and is a nucleoid-associated protein. The DNA binding and co-chaperone activities of CbpA are modulated by CbpM, a small protein that binds specifically to CbpA. To identify the regions of CbpA involved in the interaction of CbpA with CbpM and those involved in DNA binding, we constructed and characterized deletion and substitution mutants of CbpA. We discovered that CbpA interacted with CbpM through its N-terminal J-domain. We found that the region C-terminal to the J-domain was required for DNA binding. Moreover, we found that the CbpM interaction, DNA binding, and co-chaperone activities were separable; some mutants were proficient in some functions and defective in others.  相似文献   

4.
Summary A subset of Escherichia coli heat shock proteins, DnaK, DnaJ and GrpE were shown to be required for replication of mini-F plasmid. Strains of E. coli K12 carrying a missense mutation or deletion in the dnaK, dnaJ, or grpE gene were virtually unable to be transformed by mini-F DNA at the temperature (30° C) that permits cell growth. When excess amounts of the replication initiator protein (repE gene product) of mini-F were provided by means of a multicopy plasmid carrying repE, these mutant bacteria became capable of supporting mini-F replication under the same conditions. However, the copy number of a high copy number mini-F plasmid was reduced in these mutant bacteria as compared with the wild type in the presence of excess RepE protein. Furthermore, mini-F plasmid mutants that produce altered initiator protein and exhibit a very high copy number were able to replicate in strains deficient in any of the above heat shock proteins. These results indicate that the subset of heat shock proteins (DnaK, DnaJ and GrpE) play essential roles that help the functioning of the RepE initiator protein in mini-F DNA replication.  相似文献   

5.
In Escherichia coli, DnaK is essential for the replication of bacteriophage lambda DNA; this in vivo activity provides the basis of a screen for mutations affecting DnaK function. Mn PCR was used to introduce mutations into residues 405-468 of the C-terminal polypeptide-binding domain of DnaK. These mutant proteins were screened for the ability to propagate bacteriophage lambda in the background of a dnaK deficient cell line, BB1553. This initial screen identified several proteins which were mutant at multiple positions. The multiple mutants were further dissected into single mutants which remained negative for lambda propagation. Four of these single-site mutants were purified and assayed for biochemical functionality. Two single-site mutations, F426S and S427P, are localized in the peptide binding site and display weakened peptide binding affinity. This indicates that the crystallographically determined peptide binding site is also critical for in vivo lambda replication. Two other mutations, K414I and N451K, are located at the edge of the beta-sandwich domain near alpha-helix A. The K414I mutant binds peptide moderately well, yet displays defects in allosteric functions, including peptide-stimulated ATPase activity, ATP-induced changes in tryptophan fluorescence, ATP-induced peptide release, and elevated ATPase activity. The K414 position is close in tertiary structure to the linker region to the ATPase domain and reflects a specific area of the peptide-binding domain which is necessary for interdomain coupling. The mutant N451K displays defects in both peptide binding and allosteric interaction.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
ClpB is a member of a multichaperone system in Escherichia coli (with DnaK, DnaJ, and GrpE) that reactivates aggregated proteins. The sequence of ClpB contains two ATP-binding regions that are enclosed between the N- and C-terminal extensions. Whereas it has been found that the N-terminal region of ClpB is essential for the chaperone activity, the structure of this region is not known, and its biochemical properties have not been studied. We expressed and purified the N-terminal fragment of ClpB (residues 1-147). Circular dichroism of the isolated N-terminal region showed a high content of alpha-helical structure. Differential scanning calorimetry showed that the N-terminal region of ClpB is thermodynamically stable and contains a single folding domain. The N-terminal domain is monomeric, as determined by gel-filtration chromatography, and the elution profile of the N-terminal domain does not change in the presence of the N-terminally truncated ClpB (ClpBDeltaN). This indicates that the N-terminal domain does not form strong contacts with ClpBDeltaN. Consistently, addition of the separated N-terminal domain does not reverse an inhibition of ATPase activity of ClpBDeltaN in the presence of casein. As shown by ELISA measurements, full-length ClpB and ClpBDeltaN bind protein substrates (casein, inactivated luciferase) with similar affinity. We also found that the isolated N-terminal domain of ClpB interacts with heat-inactivated luciferase. Taken together, our results indicate that the N-terminal fragment of ClpB forms a distinct domain that is not strongly associated with the ClpB core and is not required for ClpB interactions with other proteins, but may be involved in recognition of protein substrates.  相似文献   

9.
The conserved, ATP-dependent bacterial DnaK chaperones process client substrates with the aid of the co-chaperones DnaJ and GrpE. However, in the absence of structural information, how these proteins communicate with each other cannot be fully delineated. For the study reported here, we solved the crystal structure of a full-length Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 GrpE homodimer in complex with a nearly full-length G. kaustophilus HTA426 DnaK that contains the interdomain linker (acting as a pseudo-substrate), and the N-terminal nucleotide-binding and C-terminal substrate-binding domains at 4.1-Å resolution. Each complex contains two DnaKs and two GrpEs, which is a stoichiometry that has not been found before. The long N-terminal GrpE α-helices stabilize the linker of DnaK in the complex. Furthermore, interactions between the DnaK substrate-binding domain and the N-terminal disordered region of GrpE may accelerate substrate release from DnaK. These findings provide molecular mechanisms for substrate binding, processing, and release during the Hsp70 chaperone cycle.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The Escherichia coli molecular chaperone protein ClpB is a member of the highly conserved Hsp100/Clp protein family. Previous studies have shown that the ClpB protein is needed for bacterial thermotolerance. Purified ClpB protein has been shown to reactivate chemically and heat-denatured proteins. In this work we demonstrate that the combined action of ClpB and the DnaK, DnaJ, and GrpE chaperones leads to the activation of DNA replication of the broad-host-range plasmid RK2. In contrast, ClpB is not needed for the activation of the oriC-dependent replication of E. coli. Using purified protein components we show that the ClpB/DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE synergistic action activates the plasmid RK2 replication initiation protein TrfA by converting inactive dimers to an active monomer form. In contrast, Hsp78/Ssc1/Mdj1/Mge1, the corresponding protein system from yeast mitochondria, cannot activate the TrfA replication protein. Our results demonstrate for the first time that the ClpB/DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE system is involved in protein monomerization and in the activation of a DNA replication factor.  相似文献   

12.
The plasmid R6K is an interesting model system for investigating initiation of DNA replication, not only near the primary binding sites of the initiator protein pi but also at a distance, caused by pi -mediated DNA looping. An important milestone in the mechanistic analysis of this replicon was the development of a reconstituted replication system consisting of 22 different highly purified proteins (Abhyankar, M. A., Zzaman, S., and Bastia, D. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 45476-45484). Although the in vitro reconstituted system promotes ori gamma-specific initiation of replication by a mutant form of the initiator called pi*, the wild type (WT) pi is functionally inert in this system. Here we show that the chaperone DnaK along with its co-chaperone DnaJ and the nucleotide exchange factor GrpE were needed to activate WT pi and caused it to initiate replication in vitro at the correct origin. We show further that the reaction was relatively chaperone-specific and that other chaperones, such as ClpB and ClpX, were incapable of activating WT pi. The molecular mechanism of activation appeared to be a chaperone-catalyzed facilitation of dimeric inert WT pi into iteron-bound monomers. Protein-protein interaction analysis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay revealed that, in the absence of ATP, DnaJ directly interacted with pi but its binary interactions with DnaK and GrpE and with ClpB and ClpX were at background levels, suggesting that pi is recruited by protein-protein interaction with DnaJ and then fed into the DnaK chaperone machine to promote initiator activation.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
K Tilly 《Journal of bacteriology》1991,173(20):6639-6642
The chromosome of the temperate bacteriophage N15 replicates as a linear plasmid with covalently closed ends (or hairpins) when it forms a lysogen. I found that, in contrast to the cases for lambda and the low-copy-number plasmids F and P1, both phage and plasmid replication of N15 are independent of the heat shock proteins DnaJ, DnaK, and GrpE.  相似文献   

15.
The Escherichia coli heat-shock protein DnaJ cooperates with the Hsp70 homolog DnaK in protein folding in vitro and in vivo. Little is known about the structural features of DnaJ that mediate its interaction with DnaK and unfolded polypeptide. DnaJ contains at least four blocks of sequence representing potential functional domains which have been conserved throughout evolution. In order to understand the role of each of these regions, we have analyzed DnaJ fragments in reactions corresponding to known functions of the intact protein. Both the N-terminal 70 amino acid 'J-domain' and a 35 amino acid glycine-phenylalanine region following it are required for interactions with DnaK. However, only complete DnaJ can cooperate with DnaK and a third protein, GrpE, in refolding denatured firefly luciferase. As demonstrated by atomic absorption and extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (EXAFS), the 90 amino acid cysteine-rich region of DnaJ contains two Zn atoms tetrahedrally coordinated to four cysteine residues, resembling their arrangement in the C4 Zn binding domains of certain DNA binding proteins. Interestingly, binding experiments and cross-linking studies indicate that this Zn finger-like domain is required for the DnaJ molecular chaperone to specifically recognize and bind to proteins in their denatured state.  相似文献   

16.
Bacteriophage lambda requires the lambda O and P proteins for its DNA replication. The rest of the replication proteins are provided by the Escherichia coli host. Some of these host proteins, such as DnaK, DnaJ, and GrpE, are heat shock proteins. Certain mutations in the dnaK, dnaJ, or grpE gene block lambda growth at all temperatures and E. coli growth above 43 degrees C. We have isolated bacterial mutants that were shown by Southern analysis to contain a defective, mini-Tn10 transposon inserted into either of two locations and in both orientations within the dnaJ gene. We have shown that these dnaJ-insertion mutants did not grow as well as the wild type at temperatures above 30 degrees C, although they blocked lambda DNA replication at all temperatures. The dnaJ-insertion mutants formed progressively smaller colonies at higher temperatures, up to 42 degrees C, and did not form colonies at 43 degrees C. The accumulation of frequent, uncharacterized suppressor mutations allowed these insertion mutants to grow better at all temperatures and to form colonies at 43 degrees C. None of these suppressor mutations restored the ability of the host to propagate phage lambda. Radioactive labeling of proteins synthesized in vivo followed by immunoprecipitation or immunoblotting with anti-DnaJ antibodies demonstrated that no DnaJ protein could be detected in these mutants. Labeling studies at different temperatures demonstrated that these dnaJ-insertion mutations resulted in altered kinetics of heat shock protein synthesis. An additional eight dnaJ mutant isolates, selected spontaneously on the basis of blocking phage lambda growth at 42 degrees C, were shown not to synthesize DnaJ protein as well. Three of these eight spontaneous mutants had gross DNA alterations in the dnaJ gene. Our data provide evidence that the DnaJ protein is not absolutely essential for E. coli growth at temperatures up to 42 degrees C under standard laboratory conditions but is essential for growth at 43 degrees C. However, the accumulation of extragenic suppressors is necessary for rapid bacterial growth at higher temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
M Ishiai  C Wada  Y Kawasaki    T Yura 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(17):5597-5603
A subset of Escherichia coli heat shock proteins, DnaJ, DnaK, and GrpE, is required for mini-F plasmid replication, presumably at the step of functioning of the RepE initiator protein. We have isolated and characterized mini-F plasmid mutants that acquired the ability to replicate in the Escherichia coli dnaJ259. The mutant plasmids were found to replicate in any of dnaJ, dnaK, and grpE mutant hosts tested. In each case, the majority of the mutant plasmids carried a unique amino acid alteration in a localized region of repE coding sequence and showed an increased copy number, whereas the minority contained a common single base change (C to T) in the promoter/operator region and produced an increased amount of RepE. All RepE proteins with altered residues (between 92 and 134) exhibited increased initiator activities (hyperactive), and many showed reduced repressor activities as well, indicating that this region is important for the both major functions of RepE protein. These results together with evidence reported elsewhere indicate that the subset of heat shock proteins serves to activate RepE protein prior to or during its binding to the replication origin and that the mutant RepE proteins are active even in their absence. We also found that a C-terminal lesion (repE602) reduces the initiator activity particularly of some hyperactive mutant RepE proteins but does not affect the repressor activity. This finding suggests a functional interaction between the central and C-terminal regions of RepE in carrying out the initiator function.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
GrpE proteins act as co-chaperones for DnaK heat-shock proteins. The dimeric protein unfolds under heat stress conditions, which results in impaired interaction with a DnaK protein. Since interaction of GrpE with DnaK is crucial for the DnaK chaperone activity, GrpE proteins act as a thermosensor in bacteria. Here we have analyzed the thermostability and function of two GrpE homologs of the mesophilic cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP1. While in Synechocystis an N-terminal helix pair of the GrpE dimer appears to be the thermosensing domain and mainly mediates GrpE dimerization, the C-terminal four-helix bundle is involved in additional stabilization of the dimeric structure. The four-helix bundle domain has a key role in the thermophilic cyanobacterium, since dimerization of the Thermosynechococcus protein appears to be mediated by the four-helix bundle domain, and melting of this domain is linked to monomerization of the GrpE protein. Thus, in two related cyanobacteria the GrpE thermosensing function might be mediated by different protein domains.  相似文献   

20.
To elucidate the role of leucine 134 of Bacillus licheniformis nucleotide exchange factor (BlGrpE), site-saturation mutagenesis was employed to generate all possible replacements for this residue. Wild-type and mutant proteins were purified by nickel-chelated chromatography and had a molecular mass of approximately 34.5 kDa. As compared with wild-type BlGrpE, the nucleotide exchange factor (NEF) activity of L134H, L134K, L134R, L134D, L134E, L134N, L134Q, L134S, L134G and L134P was reduced by more than 96%. In vitro binding assay revealed that wild-type BlGrpE and the functional variants mainly interacted with the monomer of BlDnaK, but no such interaction was observed for the remaining mutant proteins. BlGrpE and 9 mutant proteins synergistically stimulated the ATPase activity of B. licheniformis DnaK (BlDnaK), whereas the NEF-defective variants had no synergistic stimulation. Comparative analysis of the far-UV CD spectra showed that the α-helical content of the inactive mutant BlGrpEs was reduced significantly with respect to wild-type protein. Moreover, the inactive mutant proteins also exhibited a more sensitivity towards the temperature-induced denaturation. Taken together, these results indicate that Leu134 might play a structural role for the proper function of BlGrpE.  相似文献   

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