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1.
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   

2.
The biological activity of DnaK, the bacterial representative of the Hsp70 protein family, is regulated by the allosteric interaction between its nucleotide and peptide substrate binding domains. Despite the importance of the nucleotide-induced cycling of DnaK between substrate-accepting and releasing states, the heterotropic allosteric mechanism remains as yet undefined. To further characterize this mechanism, the nucleotide-induced absorbance changes in the vibrational spectrum of wild-type DnaK was characterized. To assign the conformation sensitive absorption bands, two deletion mutants (one lacking the C-terminal alpha-helical subdomain and another comprising only the N-terminal ATPase domain), and a single-point DnaK mutant (T199A) with strongly reduced ATPase activity, were investigated by time-resolved infrared difference spectroscopy combined with the use of caged-nucleotides. The results indicate that (1) ATP, but not ADP, binding promotes a conformational change in both subdomains of the peptide binding domain that can be individually resolved; (2) these conformational changes are kinetically coupled, most likely to ensure a decrease in the affinity of DnaK for peptide substrates and a concomitant displacement of the lid away from the peptide binding site that would promote efficient diffusion of the released peptide to the medium; and (3) the alpha-helical subdomain contributes to stabilize the interdomain interface against the thermal challenge and allows bidirectional transmission of the allosteric signal between the ATPase and substrate binding domains at stress temperatures (42 degrees C).  相似文献   

3.
The Escherichia coli Hsp40 DnaJ uses its J-domain to target substrate polypeptides for binding to the Hsp70 DnaK, but the mechanism of J-domain function has been obscured by a substrate-like interaction between DnaJ and DnaK. ATP hydrolysis in DnaK is associated with a conformational change that captures the substrate, and both DnaJ and substrate can stimulate ATP hydrolysis. However, substrates cannot trigger capture by DnaK in the presence of ATP, and substrates stimulate a DnaK conformational change that is uncoupled from ATP hydrolysis. The role of the J-domain was examined using the fluorescent derivative of a fusion protein composed of the J-domain and a DnaK-binding peptide. In the absence of ATP, DnaK-binding affinity of the fusion protein is similar to that of the unfused peptide. However, in the presence of ATP, the affinity of the fusion protein is dramatically increased, which is opposite to the decrease in DnaK affinity typically exhibited by peptides. Binding of a fusion protein that contains a defective J-domain is insensitive to ATP. According to results from isothermal titration calorimetry, the J-domain binds to the DnaK ATPase domain with weak affinity (K(D) = 23 microM at 20 degrees C). The interaction is characterized by a positive enthalpy, small heat capacity change (DeltaC(p)= -33 kcal mol(-1)), and increasing binding affinity for increasing temperatures in the physiological range. In conditions that support binding of the J-domain to the ATPase domain, the J-domain accelerates ATP hydrolysis and a simultaneous conformational change in DnaK that is associated with peptide capture. The defective J-domain is inactive, despite the fact that it binds to the DnaK ATPase domain with higher than wild-type affinity. The results are most consistent with an allosteric mechanism of J-domain action in which the J-domain couples ATP hydrolysis to peptide capture by accelerating ATP hydrolysis and delaying DnaK closure until ATP is hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

4.
Slepenkov SV  Witt SN 《Biochemistry》2002,41(40):12224-12235
DnaK, the Escherichia coli Hsp70, possesses two functional domains, the N- and C-terminal ATPase and peptide-binding domains, respectively. Elucidation of the mechanism of allosteric coupling between the two domains is key to understanding how Hsp70 chaperones interact with their substrates. We previously reported that ATP reacts with wild-type DnaK-peptide complexes according to the two-step reaction, ATP + DnaK-P if ATP-DnaK-P if ATP-DnaK + P, where ATP binds in the first step, and a conformational change that quenches DnaK's tryptophan fluorescence (denoted by the asterisk) and expels bound peptide occurs in the second step. Here we report that DnaK(2-517), a lidless variant, also reacts with ATP and peptide by this two-step mechanism. Compared to wild-type DnaK, we found that, depending on the sequence of the bound peptide and the temperature, deletion of the lid produces a 27- to 66-fold increase in the rate constant (k(2)) for the ATP-triggered conformational change (ATP-DnaK-P --> ATP-DnaK+P) but only a approximately 2-fold increase in the rate constant (k(-)(2)) for the reverse reaction (ATP-DnaK+P --> ATP-DnaK-P). A model is proposed in which the lid regulates the rate of interdomain communication by retarding motions within the beta-sandwich that occur as a consequence of ATP binding. New evidence in support of the reversible, two-step conformational switch mechanism is also presented.  相似文献   

5.
Slepenkov SV  Witt SN 《FEBS letters》2003,539(1-3):100-104
The molecular chaperone DnaK is composed of two functional domains, the ATPase domain and the substrate-binding domain. In this report, we show that peptide binding to DnaK can be sensed in real time through a labeled nucleotide bound in the ATPase domain. Specifically, when N8-(4-N'-methylanthraniloylaminobutyl)-8-aminoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (MABA)-ATP.DnaK complexes are rapidly mixed with excess peptide, MABA fluorescence rapidly increases and the rate of increase is proportional to peptide concentration. Analysis of the formation traces yield on and off rate constants that are exactly equal to the rate constants obtained from experiments that directly probe peptide binding to DnaK. These results are the first to show that peptide binding to ATP.DnaK triggers a concerted conformational change in the ATPase domain.  相似文献   

6.
Members of the Hsp70 (heat-shock protein of 70 kDa) family of molecular chaperones bind to exposed hydrophobic stretches on substrate proteins in order to dissociate molecular complexes and prevent aggregation in the cell. Substrate affinity for the C-terminal domain of the Hsp70 is regulated by ATP binding to the N-terminal domain utilizing an allosteric mechanism. Our multi-dimensional NMR studies of a substrate-binding domain fragment (amino acids 387-552) from an Escherichia coli Hsp70, DnaK(387-552), have uncovered a pH-dependent conformational change, which we propose to be relevant for the full-length protein also. At pH 7, the C-terminus of DnaK(387-552) mimics substrate by binding to its own substrate-binding site, as has been observed previously for truncated Hsp70 constructs. At pH 5, the C-terminus is released from the binding site, such that DnaK is in the substrate-free state 10-20% of the time. We propose that the mechanism for the release of the tail is a loss of affinity for substrate at low pH. The pH-dependent fluorescence changes at a tryptophan residue near the substrate-binding pocket in full-length DnaK lead us to extend these conclusions to the full-length DnaK as well. In the context of the DnaK substrate-binding domain fragment, the release of the C-terminus from the substrate-binding site provides our first glimpse of the empty conformation of an Hsp70 substrate-binding domain containing a portion of the helical subdomain.  相似文献   

7.
The secondary structures of DnaK and the mutant DnaK756 heat-shock proteins from Escherichia coli have been investigated by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The analysis of infrared data showed that DnaK and DnaK756 proteins have different secondary structures that are not affected by the presence of ATP or beta, gamma-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate. The infrared data indicate also that the tertiary structures of DnaK and DnaK756 proteins are different and that DnaK protein undergoes conformational changes in its tertiary structure not only during binding of ATP but also during ATP hydrolysis. Using fluorescence spectroscopy of a single tryptophan located in the N-terminal domain of DnaK protein and fluorescence of 1,1'-bis(4-anilino)naphthalene-5,5'-disulfonic acid, which interacts with hydrophobic domains of DnaK protein, we were able to distinguish between two conformational states of DnaK protein. After binding of triphosphonucleotides, the C-terminal domain of DnaK protein changes in tertiary structure in such a way that fewer hydrophobic segments are exposed on the surface of the protein. After ATP hydrolysis, the number of hydrophobic segments on the surface of the protein is further reduced, and moreover the tertiary structure of the N-terminal domain of the protein changes. These data are discussed in terms of structural and functional relationships of both DnaK and DnaK756 proteins.  相似文献   

8.
The Hsp70 family of molecular chaperones participates in a number of cellular processes, including binding to nascent polypeptide chains and assistance in protein (re)folding and degradation. We present the solution structure of the substrate binding domain (residues 393-507) of the Escherichia coli Hsp70, DnaK, that is bound to the peptide NRLLLTG and compare it to the crystal structure of DnaK(389-607) bound to the same peptide. The construct discussed here does not contain the alpha-helical domain that characterizes earlier published peptide-bound structures of the Hsp70s. It is established that removing the alpha-helical domain in its entirety does not affect the primary interactions or structure of the DnaK(393-507) in complex with the peptide NRLLLTG. In particular, the arch that protects the substrate-binding cleft is also formed in the absence of the helical lid. 15N-relaxation measurements show that the peptide-bound form of DnaK(393-507) is relatively rigid. As compared to the peptide-free state, the peptide-bound state of the domain shows distinct, widespread, and contiguous differences in structure extending toward areas previously defined as important to the allosteric regulation of the Hsp70 chaperones.  相似文献   

9.
In this study, we have used surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and isothermal microtitration calorimetry (ITC) to study the mechanism of complex formation between the Hsp70 molecular chaperone, DnaK, and its cochaperone, GrpE, which is a nucleotide exchange factor. Experiments were geared toward understanding the influence of DnaK's three domains, the ATPase (residues 1-388), substrate-binding (residues 393-507), and lid (residues 508-638) domains, on complex formation with GrpE. We show that the equilibrium dissociation constants for the interaction of GrpE with wtDnaK, lidless DnaK(2-517), the ATPase domain (2-388), and the substrate-binding fragment (393-507) are 64 (+/-16) nM, 4.0 (+/-1.5) nM, 35 (+/-10) nM, and 67 (+/-11) microM, respectively, and that the on-rate constant for the different reactions varies by over 4 orders of magnitude. SPR experiments revealed that GrpE-DnaK(393-507) complex formation is inhibited by added peptide and abolished when the 33-residue flexible "tail" of GrpE is deleted. Such results strongly suggest that the 33-residue flexible N-terminal tail of GrpE binds in the substrate-binding pocket of DnaK. This unique mode of binding between GrpE's tail and DnaK contributes to, but does not fully explain, the decrease in K(d) from 64 to 4 nM upon deletion of DnaK's lid. The possibility that deletion of DnaK's lid creates a more symmetrically shaped molecule, with enhanced affinity to GrpE, is also discussed. Our results reveal a complex set of molecular interactions between DnaK and its cochaperone GrpE. We discuss the impact of each domain on complex formation and dissociation.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The C-terminal domain of the molecular chaperone DnaK is a compact lid-like structure made up of five alpha-helices (alphaA-alphaE) (residues 508-608) that is followed by a 30-residue disordered, flexible region (609-638). The lid encapsulates the peptide molecule bound in the substrate-binding domain, whereas the function of the 30-residue disordered region is not known. By sequentially deleting the flexible subdomain and the individual lid helices, we deduced the importance of each structural unit to creating long-lived DnaK-peptide complexes. Here we report that (i) the alphaD helix is essential for long-lived DnaK-peptide complexes. For example, ATP triggers the dissociation of a acrylodan-labeled p5 peptide (ap5, a-CLLLSAPRR) from wtDnaK and DnaK595(A-D) with k(off) equal to 7.6 and 8.9 s(-1), respectively, whereas when the D-helix is deleted, creating DnaK578(A-C), k(off) jumps to 207 s(-1). (ii) The presence of the alphaB helix impacts the rate of the ATP-induced high-to-low affinity conformational change. For example, ATP induces this conformational change in a lidless variant, DnaK517(1/2A), with a rate constant of 442 s(-1), whereas, after adding back the B-helix (residues 518-554), ATP induces this conformational change in DnaK554(A-B) with a rate constant of 2.5 s(-1). Our interpretation is that this large decrease occurs because the B-helix of the DnaK554(A-B) is bound in the substrate-binding site. (iii) The deletion analysis also revealed that residues 596-638, which comprise the alphaE helix and the flexible subdomain, affect ATP binding. Our results are consistent with this part of the lid producing conformational heterogeneity, perhaps by binding to the ATPase domain.  相似文献   

12.
The molecular chaperone DnaK recognizes and binds substrate proteins via a stretch of seven amino acid residues that is usually only exposed in unfolded proteins. The binding kinetics are regulated by the nucleotide state of DnaK, which alternates between DnaK.ATP (fast exchange) and DnaK.ADP (slow exchange). These two forms cycle with a rate mainly determined by the ATPase activity of DnaK and nucleotide exchange. The different substrate binding properties of DnaK are mainly attributed to changes of the position and mobility of a helical region in the C-terminal peptide-binding domain, the so-called LID. It closes the peptide-binding pocket and thus makes peptide binding less dynamic in the ADP-bound state, but does not (strongly) interact with peptides directly. Here, we address the question if nucleotide-dependent structural changes may be observed in the peptide-binding region that could also be connected to peptide binding kinetics and more importantly could induce structural changes in peptide stretches using the energy available from ATP hydrolysis. Model peptides containing two cysteine residues at varying positions were derived from the structurally well-documented peptide NRLLLTG and labelled with electron spin sensitive probes. Measurements of distances and mobilities of these spin labels by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) of free peptides or peptides bound to the ATP and ADP-state of DnaK, respectively, showed no significant changes of mobility nor distance of the two labels. This indicates that no structural changes that could be sensed by the probes at the position of central leucine residues located in the center of the binding region occur due to different nucleotide states. We conclude from these studies that the ATPase activity of DnaK is not connected to structural changes of the peptide-binding pocket but rather only has an effect on the LID domain or other further remote residues.  相似文献   

13.
Landry SJ 《Biochemistry》2003,42(17):4926-4936
The molecular chaperone machine composed of Escherichia coli Hsp70/DnaK and Hsp40/DnaJ binds and releases client proteins in cycles of ATP-dependent protein folding, membrane translocation, disassembly, and degradation. The J-domain of DnaJ simultaneously stimulates ATP hydrolysis in the ATPase domain and capture of the client protein in the peptide-binding domain of DnaK. ATP-dependent binding of DnaJ to DnaK mimics DnaJ-dependent capture of a client protein. The dnaJ mutation that replaces aspartate-35 with asparagine (D35N) in the J-domain causes a defect in binding of DnaJ to DnaK. The dnaK mutation that replaces arginine-167 with alanine (R167A) in the ATPase domain of DnaK(R167A) restores binding of DnaJ(D35N). This genetic interaction was said to be allele-specific because wild-type DnaJ does not bind to DnaK(R167A). The J-domain of DnaJ binds to the ATPase domain of DnaK in its capacity as modulator of DnaK ATPase activity and conformational behavior. Surprisingly, the mutations affect the domainwise interaction in an almost opposite manner. D35N increases the affinity of the J-domain for the ATPase domain. R167A has no affect on the affinity of the ATPase domain for the D35N mutant J-domain, but it reduces the affinity for the wild-type J-domain. Previous amide ((1)H, (15)N) NMR chemical shift perturbation mapping in the J-domain suggested that the ATPase domain binds to J-domain helix II and the flanking loops. In the D35N mutant J-domain, chemical shift perturbations include additional effects at amides in the flexible loop II-III and helix III, which have been proposed to undergo an induced fit conformational change upon binding to DnaK. The integrated magnitudes of chemical shift perturbations for the various J-domain and ATPase domain pairs correlate with the free energies of binding. Thus, the J-domain structure can be described as a dynamic ensemble of conformations that is constrained by binding to the ATPase domain. J-domain helix II bends upon binding to the ATPase domain. D35N increases helix II bending, but less so in combination with R167A in the ATPase domain. Taken together, the results suggest that D35N overstabilizes an induced fit conformational change in loop II-III and helix III that is necessary for the J-domain to couple ATP hydrolysis with a conformational change in DnaK, and R167A destabilizes the induced conformation. Conclusions from this work have implications for understanding mechanisms of protein-protein interaction that are involved in allosteric regulation and genetic suppression.  相似文献   

14.
The C-terminal, polypeptide binding domain of the 70-kDa molecular chaperone DnaK is composed of a unique lidlike subdomain that appears to hinder steric access to the peptide binding site. We have expressed, purified, and characterized a lidless form of DnaK to test the influence of the lid on the ATPase activity, on interdomain communication, and on the kinetics of peptide binding. The principal findings are that loss of the lid creates an activated form of DnaK which is not equivalent to ATP-bound DnaK. For example, at 25 degrees C the NR peptide (NRLLLTG) dissociates from the ADP and ATP states of DnaK with observed off-rate constants of 0.001 and 4.8 s(-1), respectively. In contrast, for DnaK that lacks most of the helical lid, residues 518-638, the NR peptide dissociates with observed off-rate constants of 0.1 and 188 s(-1). These results show that the loss of the lid does not interfere with interdomain communication, that the beta-sandwich peptide binding domain can exist in two discrete conformations, and that the lid functions to increase the lifetime of a DnaK.peptide complex. We discuss several mechanisms to explain how the lid affects the lifetime of a DnaK.peptide complex.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
DnaK, a major Hsp70 molecular chaperones in Escherichia coli, is a widely used model for studying Hsp70s. We recently solved a crystal structure of DnaK in complex with ATP and showed that DnaK was packed as a dimer in the crystal structure. Our previous biochemical studies supported the formation of a specific DnaK dimer as observed in the crystal structure in solution in the presence of ATP and suggested an important role of this dimer in efficient interaction with Hsp40 co-chaperones. In this study, we dissected the biochemical properties of this DnaK dimer. To restrict DnaK in this dimer form, we mutated two residues on the dimer interface to cysteine, A303C, and H541C. Upon oxidation, this DnaK-A303C-H541C protein formed a specific dimer linked by disulfide bonds formed between A303C and H541C only in the presence of ATP, consistent with the crystal structure. Intriguingly, this disulfide-bond-linked dimer of DnaK-A303C-H541C has reduced ATPase activity and decreased affinity for peptide substrate. More interestingly, unlike wild-type DnaK, the peptide substrate-binding kinetics of this dimer is drastically accelerated even in the absence of ATP, suggesting this dimer is restricted in an ATP-bound conformation regardless of nucleotide bound, which was further supported by our analysis using tryptophan fluorescence and ATP-induced peptide release. Thus, formation of the dimer restricted DnaK in an ATP-bound state and blocked the progression through the chaperone cycle. Productive progression through the chaperone cycle requires the dissociation of this transient dimer. Surprisingly, a significantly compromised interaction with Hsp40 co-chaperone was observed for this disulfide-bond-linked dimer. Thus, dissociation of this DnaK dimer is equally crucial for efficient Hsp40 interaction. An initial interaction between Hsp70 and Hsp40 requires the formation of DnaK dimer; but a stable Hsp70-Hsp40 interaction may follow the dissociation of the dimer.  相似文献   

17.
DnaK is a molecular chaperone that promotes cell survival during stress by preventing protein misfolding. The chaperone activity is regulated by nucleotide binding and hydrolysis events in the N-terminal ATPase domain, which in turn mediate substrate binding and release in the C-terminal substrate binding domain. In this study we determined that ATP hydrolysis was the rate limiting step in the ATPase cycle of Agrobacterium tumefaciens DnaK (Agt DnaK); however the data suggested that Agt DnaK had a significantly lower affinity for ATP than Escherichia coli DnaK. We show for the first time that Agt DnaK was very effective at preventing thermal aggregation of malate dehydrogenase (MDH) in a concentration dependent manner. This is in contrast to E. coli DnaK which was ineffective at preventing thermal aggregation of MDH. A mutant Agt DnaK-V431F, with a blocked hydrophobic pocket in the substrate binding domain, was unable to suppress the thermosensitivty of an E. coli dnaK103 deletion strain. However the mutation did not inhibit Agt DnaK-V431F from preventing the thermal aggregation of MDH. The oligomeric state of Agt DnaK was studied using size exclusion chromatography. We demonstrated that dilution of the Agt DnaK protein, the addition of ATP and the removal of the 10kDa C-terminal alpha-helical subdomain reduced higher order associations but did not abrogate dimerisation. Our research implies that the C-terminal alpha-helical subdomain is involved in higher order associations, while the substrate binding domain is possibly involved in dimerisation.  相似文献   

18.
Chesnokova LS  Witt SN 《Biochemistry》2005,44(33):11224-11233
Hsp70 chaperones are heterotropic allosteric systems in which ATP and misfolded or aggregated polypeptides are the activating ligands. To gain insight into the mechanism by which ATP and polypeptides regulate Hsp70 chaperone activity, the effect of a short peptide on the K(M) for ATP was analyzed using the Escherichia coli Hsp70 called DnaK. In the absence of peptide, the K(-P)(M) for ATP is 52 +/- 11 nM, whereas this value jumps to 14.6 +/- 1.6 microM in the presence of saturating peptide. This finding supports a mechanism in which ATP binding drives the chaperone in one direction and peptide binding pushes the chaperone back in the opposite direction (and thus increases K(M)), according to ATP + DnaK.P <==> ATP.DnaK.P <==> ATP.DnaK* + P, where ATP.DnaK.P is an intermediate from which competing ATP hydrolysis occurs (ATP.DnaK.P --> ADP.DnaK.P). We show that this branched mechanism can even explain how DnaK hydrolyzes ATP in the absence of peptide and that the true rate constant for DnaK-mediated ATP hydrolysis (k(hy)) in the absence of peptide may be as high as 0.5 s(-)(1) (rather than 5 x 10(-)(4) s(-)(1) as often stated in the literature). What happens is that a conformational equilibrium outcompetes ATP hydrolysis and effectively reduces the concentration of the intermediate by a factor of a thousand, resulting in the following relation: k(cat) = k(hy)/1000 = 5 x 10(-)(4) s(-)(1). How polypeptide substrates and the co-chaperone DnaJ modulate DnaK to achieve its theoretical maximal rate of ATP hydrolysis, which we suggest is 0.5 s(-)(1), is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The role of nucleotide in controlling the pre-steady-state kinetics of peptide binding to the Escherichia coli 70-kDa molecular chaperone DnaK was investigated using stopped-flow fluorescence. The peptide used in this study, fVSV13 (representing amino acids 490-502 of the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein), was dansylated specifically at its N-terminus. We found that (i) between 17 and 35 degrees C in the presence of ATP the second-order rate constant (k(on)) for fVSV13 binding to DnaK exhibited almost no dependence on temperature and did not deviate significantly from 3.8 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1). In contrast, over the same temperature range in the presence of ADP, k(on) increased by a factor of 32 (7.3 x 10(4) to 2.3 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)); and (ii) ATP increased the apparent first-order rate constant for the release of fVSV13 from preformed DnaK-fVSV13 complexes by several orders of magnitude relative to ADP. The activation energy parameters for fVSV13 binding to and dissociation from DnaK are compared to the activation parameters for the binding of an unrelated peptide to DnaK and are also discussed in terms of an open-to-closed equilibrium in the polypeptide-binding domain. On the basis of this comparison, it is suggested that the activation entropy term deltaS++, which is related to the structure of the DnaK-bound peptide or the degree of solvation of the peptide, is a controlling factor in the kinetics of peptide binding to DnaK.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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