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1.
Thomas-Wohlever J  Lee I 《Biochemistry》2002,41(30):9418-9425
Lon is an ATP-dependent protease that degrades unstructured proteins. In this study, we have examined the ATP dependency of Escherichia coli Lon catalyzing the hydrolysis of a defined fluorogenic peptide known as S3. Steady-state velocity analyses of S3 degradation in the presence of ATP, or the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue AMPPNP, indicate a sequential mechanism, and the k(cat) of the reaction was 7-fold higher in the presence of ATP. Comparing the pre-steady-state time courses of the ATP- versus AMPPNP-mediated S3 hydrolysis reveals that ATP hydrolysis accelerates a slow step before the chemical cleavage of peptide. Product inhibition studies indicate that ADP is competitive versus ATP but noncompetitive versus the S3 substrate. In the absence of S3, Lon exhibits a 10-20-fold higher affinity for ADP than ATP. However the S3 substrate weakens the affinity of Lon for ADP by 7-19-fold, indicating that this peptide also promotes ADP/ATP exchange in Lon similar to that observed with protein substrates. The hydrolyzed peptide product, Pd1, exhibited noncompetitive inhibition versus both ATP and S3 substrates. Together with the small change in the K(i) of Pd1 at increasing S3 concentrations, the Pd1 inhibition data support the existence of an isomechanism in Lon catalyzing the hydrolysis of S3 in the presence of ATP or AMPPNP. Upon the basis of the collected data, an extended kinetic mechanism is proposed for the ATP-dependent peptidase mechanism of Lon.  相似文献   

2.
Lon protease from Escherichia coli degraded lambda N protein in a reaction mixture consisting of the two homogeneous proteins, ATP, and MgCl2 in 50 mM Tris, Ph 8.0. Genetic and biochemical data had previously indicated that N protein is a substrate for Lon protease in vivo (Gottesman, S., Gottesman, M., Shaw, J. E., and Pearson, M. L. (1981) Cell 24, 225-233). Under conditions used for N protein degradation, several lambda and E. coli proteins, including native proteins, oxidatively modified proteins, and cloned fragments of native proteins, were not degraded by Lon protease. Degradation of N protein occurred with catalytic amounts of Lon protease and required the presence of ATP or an analog of ATP. This is the first demonstration of the selective degradation of a physiological substrate by Lon protease in vitro. The turnover number for N protein degradation was approximately 60 +/- 10 min-1 at pH 8.0 in 50 mM Tris/HCl, 25 mM MgCl2 and 4 mM ATP. By comparison the turnover number for oxidized insulin B chain was 20 min-1 under these conditions. Kinetic studies suggest that N protein (S0.5 = 13 +/- 5 microM) is intermediate between oxidized insulin B chain (S0.5 = 160 +/- 10 microM) and methylated casein (S0.5 = 2.5 +/- 1 microM) in affinity for Lon protease. N protein was extensively degraded by Lon protease with an average of approximately six bonds cleaved per molecule. In N protein, as well as in oxidized insulin B chain and glucagon, Lon protease preferentially cut at bonds at which the carboxy group was contributed by an amino acid with an aliphatic side chain (leucine or alanine). However, not all such bonds of the substrates were cleaved, indicating that sequence or conformational determinants beyond the cleavage site affect the ability of Lon protease to degrade a protein.  相似文献   

3.
In contrast to the eucaryal 26S proteasome and the bacterial ATP-dependent proteases, little is known about the energy-dependent proteolysis in members of the third domain, Archae. We cloned a gene homologous to ATP-dependent Lon protease from a hyperthermophilic archaeon and observed the unique properties of the archaeal Lon. Lon from Thermococcus kodakaraensis KOD1 (Lon(Tk)) is a 70-kDa protein with an N-terminal ATPase domain belonging to the AAA(+) superfamily and a C-terminal protease domain including a putative catalytic triad. Interestingly, a secondary structure prediction suggested the presence of two transmembrane helices within the ATPase domain and Western blot analysis using specific antiserum against the recombinant protein clearly indicated that Lon(Tk) was actually a membrane-bound protein. The recombinant Lon(Tk) possessed thermostable ATPase activity and peptide cleavage activity toward fluorogenic peptides with optimum temperatures of 95 and 70 degrees C, respectively. Unlike the enzyme from Escherichia coli, we found that Lon(Tk) showed higher peptide cleavage activity in the absence of ATP than it did in the presence of ATP. When three kinds of proteins with different thermostabilities were examined as substrates, it was found that Lon(Tk) required ATP for degradation of folded proteins, probably due to a chaperone-like function of the ATPase domain, along with ATP hydrolysis. In contrast, Lon(Tk) degraded unfolded proteins in an ATP-independent manner, suggesting a mode of action in Lon(Tk) different from that of its bacterial counterpart.  相似文献   

4.
Escherichia coli Lon, also known as protease La, is an oligomeric ATP-dependent protease, which functions to degrade damaged and certain short-lived regulatory proteins in the cell. To investigate the kinetic mechanism of E. coli Lon protease, we performed the first pre-steady-state kinetic characterization of the ATPase and peptidase activities of this enzyme. Using rapid quench-flow and fluorescence stopped-flow spectroscopy techniques, we demonstrated that ATP hydrolysis occurs before peptide cleavage, with the former reaction displaying a burst and the latter displaying a lag in product production. The detection of burst kinetics in ATP hydrolysis is indicative of a step after nucleotide hydrolysis being rate-limiting in ATPase turnover. At saturating substrate concentrations, the lag rate constant for peptide cleavage is comparable to the kcat of ATPase, indicating that two hydrolytic processes are coordinated during the first enzyme turnover. The involvement of subunit interaction during enzyme catalysis was detected as positive cooperativity in the binding and hydrolysis of substrates, as well as apparent asymmetry in the ATPase activity in Lon. When our data are taken together, they are consistent with a reaction model in which ATP hydrolysis is used to generate an active enzyme form that hydrolyzes peptide.  相似文献   

5.
Protease Ti, a new ATP-dependent protease in Escherichia coli, degrades proteins and ATP in a linked process, but these two hydrolytic functions are catalyzed by distinct components of the enzyme. To clarify the enzyme's specificity and the role of ATP, a variety of fluorogenic peptides were tested as possible substrates for protease Ti or its two components. Protease Ti rapidly hydrolyzed N-succinyl(Suc)-Leu-Tyr-amidomethylcoumarin (AMC) (Km = 1.3 mM) which is not degraded by protease La, the other ATP-dependent protease in E. coli. Protease Ti also hydrolyzed, but slowly, Suc-Ala-Ala-Phe-AMC and Suc-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-AMC. However, it showed little or no activity against basic or other hydrophobic peptides, including ones degraded rapidly by protease La. Component P, which contains the serine-active site, by itself rapidly degrades the same peptides as the intact enzyme. Addition of component A, which contains the ATP-hydrolyzing site and is necessary for protein degradation, had little or no effect on peptide hydrolysis. N-Ethylmaleimide, which inactivates the ATPase, did not inhibit peptide hydrolysis. In addition, this peptide did not stimulate the ATPase activity of component A (unlike protein substrates). Thus, although the serine-active site on component P is unable to degrade proteins, it is fully functional against small peptides in the absence of ATP. At high concentrations, Suc-Leu-Tyr-AMC caused a complete inhibition of casein breakdown, and diisopropylfluorophosphate blocked similarly the hydrolysis of both protein and peptide substrates. Thus, both substrates seem to be hydrolyzed at the same active site on component P, and ATP hydrolysis by component A either unmasks or enlarges this proteolytic site such that large proteins can gain access to it.  相似文献   

6.
Lon is an ATP-dependent serine protease that degrades damaged and certain regulatory proteins in vivo. Lon exists as a homo-oligomer and represents one of the simplest ATP-dependent proteases because both the protease and ATPase domains are located within each monomeric subunit. Previous pre-steady-state kinetic studies revealed functional nonequivalency in the ATPase activity of the enzyme [Vineyard, D., et al. (2005) Biochemistry 44, 1671-1682]. Both a high- and low-affinity ATPase site has been previously reported for Lon [Menon, A. S., and Goldberg, A. L. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14921-14928]. Because of the differing affinities for ATP, we were able to monitor the activities of the sites separately and determine that they were noninteracting. The high-affinity sites hydrolyze ATP very slowly (k(obs) = 0.019 +/- 0.002 s(-1)), while the low-affinity sites hydrolyze ATP quickly at a rate of 17.2 +/- 0.09 s(-1), which is comparable to the previously observed burst rate. Although the high-affinity sites hydrolyze ATP slowly, they support multiple rounds of peptide hydrolysis, indicating that ATP and peptide hydrolysis are not stoichiometrically linked. However, ATP binding and hydrolysis at both the high- and low-affinity sites are necessary for optimal peptide cleavage and the stabilization of the conformational change associated with nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

7.
Vineyard D  Zhang X  Lee I 《Biochemistry》2006,45(38):11432-11443
Lon is an oligomeric serine protease whose proteolytic activity is mediated by ATP hydrolysis. Although each monomeric subunit has an identical sequence, Lon contains two types of ATPase sites that hydrolyze ATP at drastically different rates. The catalytic low-affinity sites display pre-steady-state burst kinetics and hydrolyze ATP prior to peptide cleavage. The high-affinity sites are able to hydrolyze ATP at a very slow rate. By utilizing the differing Kd's, the high-affinity site can be blocked with unlabeled nucleotide while the activity at the low-affinity site is monitored. Little kinetic data are available that describe microscopic events along the reaction pathway of Lon. In this study we utilize MANT-ATP, a fluorescent analogue of ATP, to monitor the rate constants for binding of ATP as well as the release of ADP from Escherichia coli Lon protease. All of the adenine nucleotides tested bound to Lon on the order of 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), and the previously proposed conformational change associated with nucleotide binding was also detected. On the basis of the data obtained in this study we propose that the rate of ADP release is slightly different for the two ATPase sites. As the model peptide substrate [S2; YRGITCSGRQK(Bz)] [Thomas-Wohlever, J., and Lee, I. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 9418-9425] or the protein substrate casein affects only the steady-state ATPase activity of the low-affinity sites, we propose that Lon adopts a different form after its first turnover as an ATP-dependent protease. Based on the obtained rate constants, a revised kinetic model is presented for ATPase activity in Lon protease in both the absence and presence of the model peptide substrate (S2).  相似文献   

8.
Lon, also known as protease La, is an AAA+ protease machine that contains the ATPase and proteolytic domain within each enzyme subunit. Three truncated Escherichia coli Lon (ELon) mutants were generated based on a previous limited tryptic digestion result and hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry analyses performed in this study. Using methods developed for characterizing wild-type (WT) Lon, we compared the ATPase, ATP-dependent protein degradation and ATP-dependent peptidase activities. With the exception of not degrading a putative structured substrate known as CcrM (cell-cycle-regulated DNA methyltransferase), the mutant lacking the first 239 residues behaved like WT ELon. Comparing the activity data of WT and ELon mutants reveals that the first 239 residues are not needed for minimal enzyme catalysis. The mutants lacking the first 252 residues or residues 232-252 displayed compromised ATPase, protein degradation and ATP-dependent peptide translocation abilities but retained WT-like steady-state peptidase activity. The binding affinities of WT and Lon mutants were evaluated by determining the concentration of λ N (K(λN)) needed to achieve 50% maximal ATPase stimulation. Comparing the K(λN) values reveals that the region encompassing 232-252 of ELon could contribute to λ N binding, but the effect is modest. Taken together, results generated from this study reveal that the region constituting residues 240-252 of ELon is important for ATPase activity, substrate translocation and protein degradation.  相似文献   

9.
Protease La is an ATP-dependent protease that catalyzes the rapid degradation of abnormal proteins and certain normal polypeptides in Escherichia coli. In order to learn more about its specificity and the role of ATP, we tested whether small fluorogenic peptides might serve as substrates. In the presence of ATP and Mg2+, protease La hydrolyzes two oligopeptides that are also substrates for chymotrypsin, glutaryl-Ala-Ala-Phe-methoxynaphthylamine (MNA) and succinyl-Phe-Leu-Phe-MNA. Methylation or removal of the acidic blocking group prevented hydrolysis. Closely related peptides (glutaryl-Gly-Gly-Phe-MNA and glutaryl-Ala-Ala-Ala-MNA) are cleaved only slightly, and substrates of trypsin-like proteases are not hydrolyzed. Furthermore, several peptide chloromethyl ketone derivatives that inhibit chymotrypsin and cathepsin G (especially benzyloxycarbonyl-Gly-Leu-Phe-chloro-methyl ketone), inhibited protease La. Thus its active site prefers peptides containing large hydrophobic residues, and amino acids beyond the cleavage site influence rates of hydrolysis. Peptide hydrolysis resembles protein breakdown by protease La in many respects: 1) ADP inhibits this process rapidly, 2) DNA stimulates it, 3) heparin, diisopropyl fluorophosphate, and benzoyl-Arg-Gly-Phe-Phe-Leu-MNA inhibit hydrolysis, 4) the reaction is maximal at pH 9.0-9.5, 5) the protein purified from lon- E. coli or Salmonella typhymurium showed no activity against the peptide, and that from lonR9 inhibited peptide hydrolysis by the wild-type enzyme. With partially purified enzyme, peptide hydrolysis was completely dependent on ATP. The pure protease hydrolyzed the peptide slowly when only Mg2+, Ca2+, or Mn2+ were present, and ATP enhanced this activity 6-15-fold (Km = 3 microM). Since these peptides cannot undergo phosphorylation, adenylylation, modification of amino groups, or denaturation, these mechanisms cannot account for the stimulation by ATP. Most likely, ATP and Mg2+ affect the conformation of the enzyme, rather than that of the substrate.  相似文献   

10.
Licht S  Lee I 《Biochemistry》2008,47(12):3595-3605
Clp, Lon, and FtsH proteases are proteolytic molecular machines that use the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to unfold protein substrates and processively present them to protease active sites. Here we review recent biochemical and structural studies relevant to the mechanism of ATP-dependent processive proteolysis. Despite the significant structural differences among the Clp, Lon, and FtsH proteases, these enzymes share important mechanistic features. In these systems, mechanistic studies have provided evidence for ATP binding and hydrolysis-driven conformational changes that drive translocation of substrates, which has significant implications for the processive mechanism of proteolysis. These studies indicate that the nucleotide (ATP, ADP, or nonhydrolyzable ATP analogues) occupancy of the ATPase binding sites can influence the binding mode and/or binding affinity for protein substrates. A general mechanism is proposed in which the communication between ATPase active sites and protein substrate binding regions coordinates a processive cycle of substrate binding, translocation, proteolysis, and product release.  相似文献   

11.
Some aspects of the ATPase function of the Escherichia coli Lon protease were studied around the optimum pH value. It was revealed that, in the absence of the protein substrate, the maximum ATPase activity of the enzyme is observed at an equimolar ratio of ATP and Mg2+ ions in the area of their millimolar concentrations. Free components of the substrate complex (ATP-Mg)2- inhibit the enzyme ATPase activity. It is hypothesized that the effector activity of free Mg2+ ions is caused by the formation of the "ADP-Mg-form" of the ATPase centers. It was shown that the activation of ATP hydrolysis in the presence of the protein substrate is accompanied by an increase in the affinity of the (ATP-Mg)2- complex to the enzyme, by the elimination of the inhibiting action of free Mg2+ ions without altering the efficiency of catalysis of ATP hydrolysis (based on the kcat value), and by a change in the type of inhibition of ATP hydrolysis by the (ADP-Mg)- complex (without changing the Ki value). Interaction of the Lon protease protein substrate with the enzyme area located outside the peptide hydrolase center was demonstrated by a direct experiment.  相似文献   

12.
The absence of direct correlation between the efficiency of functioning of ATPase and peptide hydrolase sites of Lon protease was revealed. It was shown that Lon protease is an allosteric enzyme, in which the catalytic activity of peptide hydrolase sites is provided by the binding of nucleotides, their magnesium complexes, and free magnesium ions in the enzyme ATPase sites. It was revealed that the ADP–Mg complex, an inhibitor of the native enzyme, is an activator of the Lon-K362Q (the Lon protease mutant in the ATPase site). Variants of functional contacts between different sites of the enzyme are considered. It was established that two ways of signal transduction from the ATPase sites to peptide hydrolase ones exist in the Lon protease oligomer--intra- and intersubunit ways. The enzyme ATPase sites are suggested to be located in the areas of the complementary surfaces of subunits. It is hypothesized that upon degradation of protein substrates by the E. coliLon protease in vivoATP hydrolysis acts as a factor of limitation of the enzyme degrading activity.  相似文献   

13.
Bruckner RC  Gunyuzlu PL  Stein RL 《Biochemistry》2003,42(36):10843-10852
FtsH from Escherichia coli is an ATP- and Zn(2+)-dependent integral membrane protease that is involved in the degradation of regulatory proteins such as sigma(32) and uncomplexed subunits of membrane protein complexes such as secY of the protein translocase. We describe a protocol for solubilizing the recombinant enzyme from inclusion bodies and its subsequent refolding and purification to near homogeneity. This is a high-yield protocol and produces in excess of 20 mg of purified FtsH per liter of E. coli culture. We found that refolded FtsH has biochemical properties similar to detergent extracted overexpressed protein described previously. FtsH forms a large complex with an apparent mass of 1200 kDa as determined by gel filtration. Both ATPase and protease activities are coincident with this large complex; smaller forms of FtsH do not exhibit either activity. While FtsH-catalyzed hydrolysis of ATP can occur in the absence of protein substrate (k(c) = 22 min(-1); K(m) = 23 microM), proteolysis shows an absolute dependence on nucleoside-5'-triphosphates, including ATP, CTP, and various analogues. In the presence of 5 mM ATP, FtsH catalyzes the hydrolysis of sigma(32) with the following observed kinetic parameters: k(c) = 0.18 min(-1) and K(m) = 8.5 microM. Significantly, this reaction is processive and generates no intermediate species, but rather, approximately 10 peptide products, all of MW <3 kDa. FtsH protease also efficiently hydrolyzes the peptide Phe-Gly-His-(NO)2Phe-Phe-Ala-Phe-OMe. Hydrolysis occurs exclusively at the (NO)2Phe-Phe bond (k(c) = 2.1 min(-1); K(m) = 12 microM), and like proteolysis, shows an absolute dependence on NTPs. We propose a mechanism for the coupled hydrolytic activities of FtsH toward ATP and peptide substrates that is consistent with a recently proposed structural model for FtsH.  相似文献   

14.
The absence of direct correlation between the efficiency of functioning of ATPase and peptidehydrolase sites of Lon protease was revealed. It was shown that Lon protease is an allosteric enzyme, in which the catalytic activity of peptidehydrolase sites is determined by the binding of nucleotides, their magnesium complexes, and free magnesium ions in the enzyme's ATPase sites. It was revealed that complex ADP-Mg, an inhibitor of the native enzyme, is an activator of the Lon-K362Q form of the Lon protease mutant in the ATPase site. Considered are variants of intersite functional contacts realizing in the enzyme. The existence of two ways of signal transduction was established from the ATPase sites to peptidehydrolase ones in the Lon protease oligomer--intra- and intersubunit ways. Location of the enzyme ATPase sites is suggested in the areas of the complementary surfaces of subunits. It is hypothesized that ATP hydrolysis upon degradation of protein substrates by the E. coli Lon protease in vivo acts as a factor of restriction of the enzyme's degrading activity.  相似文献   

15.
Reticulocytes contain a nonlysosomal, ATP-dependent system for degrading abnormal proteins and normal proteins during cell maturation. Vanadate, which inhibits several ATPases including the ATP-dependent proteases in Escherichia coli and liver mitochondria, also markedly reduced the ATP-dependent degradation of proteins in reticulocyte extracts. At low concentrations (K1 = 50 microM), vanadate inhibited the ATP-dependent hydrolysis of [3H]methylcasein and denatured 125I-labeled bovine serum albumin, but it did not reduce the low amount of proteolysis seen in the absence of ATP. This inhibition by vanadate was rapid in onset, reversed by dialysis, and was not mimicked by molybdate. Vanadate inhibits proteolysis at an ATP-stimulated step which is independent of the ATP requirement for ubiquitin conjugation to protein substrates. When the amino groups on casein and bovine serum albumin were covalently modified so as to prevent their conjugation to ubiquitin, the derivatized proteins were still degraded by an ATP-stimulated process that was inhibited by vanadate. In addition, vanadate did not reduce the ATP-dependent conjugation of 125I-ubiquitin to endogenous reticulocyte proteins, although it markedly inhibited their degradation. In intact reticulocytes vanadate also inhibited the degradation of endogenous proteins and of abnormal proteins containing amino acid analogs. This effect was rapid and reversible; however, vanadate also reduced protein synthesis and eventually lowered ATP levels in the intact cells. Vanadate (10 mM) has also been reported to decrease intralysosomal proteolysis in hepatocytes. However, in liver extracts this effect on lysosomal proteases required high concentrations of vanadate (K1 = 500 microM) and was also observed with molybdate, unlike the inhibition of ATP-dependent proteolysis in reticulocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Lon is an ATP-dependent protease of Escherichia coli. The lon mutation has a pleiotropic phenotype: UV sensitivity, mucoidy, deficiency for lysogenization by bacteriophage lambda and P1, and lower efficiency in the degradation of abnormal proteins. All of these phenotypes are correlated with the loss of protease activity. Here we examine the effects of overproduction of one Lon substrate, SulA, and show that it protects two other substrates from degradation. To better understand this protection, we mutagenized the sulA gene and selected for mutants that have partially or totally lost their ability to saturate the Lon protease and thus can no longer protect another substrate. Some of the SulA mutants lost their ability to protect RcsA from degradation but could still protect the O thermosensitive mutant protein (Ots). All of the mutants retained their capacity to induce cell division inhibition. It was also found that deletion of the C-terminal end of SulA affected its activity but did not affect its susceptibility to Lon. We propose that Lon may have more than one specificity for peptide cleavage.  相似文献   

17.
SulA protein is known to be one of the physiological substrates of Lon protease, an ATP-dependent protease from Escherichia coli. In this study, we investigated the cleavage specificity of Lon protease toward SulA protein. The enzyme was shown to cleave approximately 27 peptide bonds in the presence of ATP. Among them, six peptide bonds were cleaved preferentially in the early stage of digestion, which represented an apparently unique cleavage sites with mainly Leu and Ser residues at the P1, and P1' positions, respectively, and one or two Gln residues in positions P2-P5. They were located in the central region and partly in the C-terminal region, both of which are known to be important for the function of SulA, such as inhibition of cell growth and interaction with Lon protease, respectively. The other cleavage sites did not represent such consensus sequences, though hydrophobic or noncharged residues appeared to be relatively preferred at the P1 sites. On the other hand, the cleavage in the absence of ATP was very much slower, especially in the central region, than in the presence of ATP. The central region was predicted to be rich in alpha helix and beta sheet structures, suggesting that the enzyme required ATP for disrupting such structures prior to cleavage. Taken together, SulA is thought to contain such unique cleavage sites in its functionally and structurally important regions whose preferential cleavage accelerates the ATP-dependent degradation of the protein by Lon protease.  相似文献   

18.
Clp protease is a high relative molecular mass, ATP-dependent protease found in the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli. Clp protease is composed of two protein components, Clp A, which has ATPase activity, and Clp P, which has the proteolytic active site and is activated by Clp A in the presence of ATP. Clp P subunits (Mr = 21,500) are arranged in two hexagonal rings directly superimposed on each other, and under low salt conditions two dodecamers associate to form a particle with Mr approximately 440,000. Clp A (subunit Mr = 83,000) and Clp P do not associate in the absence of nucleotide, but Clp A with ATP bound associates with Clp P to form an active proteolytic complex with Mr approximately 700,000. Although adenosine 5'-[beta gamma-imido]triphosphate (AMPPNP) weakly promotes association between Clp A and Clp P, non-hydrolysable analogues of ATP do not activate proteolysis, indicating that association between the components is not sufficient to allow proteolysis. Association between Clp A and Clp P does not alter the basal ATPase activity of Clp A, but addition of protein substrates is accompanied by an increase in ATP hydrolysis by Clp A. Chemically-inactivated Clp P or inactive mutants of Clp P also associate with Clp A, but no increase in the ATPase activity of Clp A is observed, either in the presence or absence of protein substrates, when Clp P is inactive. Thus the increased ATP hydrolysis is dependent on active proteolysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Degron binding regulates the activities of the AAA+ Lon protease in addition to targeting proteins for degradation. The sul20 degron from the cell‐division inhibitor SulA is shown here to bind to the N domain of Escherichia coli Lon, and the recognition site is identified by cross‐linking and scanning for mutations that prevent sul20‐peptide binding. These N‐domain mutations limit the rates of proteolysis of model sul20‐tagged substrates and ATP hydrolysis by an allosteric mechanism. Lon inactivation of SulA in vivo requires binding to the N domain and robust ATP hydrolysis but does not require degradation or translocation into the proteolytic chamber. Lon‐mediated relief of proteotoxic stress and protein aggregation in vivo can also occur without degradation but is not dependent on robust ATP hydrolysis. In combination, these results demonstrate that Lon can function as a protease or a chaperone and reveal that some of its ATP‐dependent biological activities do not require translocation.  相似文献   

20.
In addition to protease La (the lon gene product), Escherichia coli contains another ATP-dependent protease, Ti. This enzyme (approximately 340 kDa) is composed of two components, both of which are required for proteolysis. Both have been purified to homogeneity by conventional procedures using [3H]casein as the substrate. The ATP-stabilized component, A, has a subunit molecular weight of 80,000 upon gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, but it behaves as a dimer (140 kDa) upon gel filtration. Component P, which is relatively heat stable, is inactivated by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and can be labeled with [3H] diisopropyl fluorophosphate. It has a subunit size of 23 kDa, but the isolated component behaves as a complex (260 kDa) of 10-12 subunits. The isoelectric point of component A is 7.0 and that of P is 8.2, and their amino acid compositions differ considerably. The purified enzyme has an ATPase activity that is stimulated 2-4-fold by casein and other protein substrates but not by nonhydrolyzed proteins. Component A also shows ATPase activity which can be stimulated by casein. Addition of component P (which lacks ATPase activity) inhibits basal ATP hydrolysis by A and makes this ATPase more responsive to casein. Although component P contains the serine active site for proteolysis, it shows no proteolytic activity in the absence of component A, Mg2+, and ATP or dATP. Other nucleoside triphosphates are not hydrolyzed and do not support proteolysis. Protease Ti has a Km for ATP of 210 microM for hydrolysis of both casein and ATP. Casein increases the Vmax for ATP without affecting the Km. A Mg2+ concentration of 5 mM is necessary for half-maximal rates of ATP and casein hydrolysis. Ca2+ and Mn2+ partially support these activities. Thus, protease Ti shares many unusual properties with protease La (e.g. coupled ATP and protein hydrolysis and protein-activated ATPase), but these functions in protease Ti are associated with distinct subunits that modify each other's activities.  相似文献   

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