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Showing papers by "Robert T. Sauer published in 2012"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: ClpXP as mentioned in this paper is a AAA+ protease that uses the energy of ATP binding and hydrolysis to perform mechanical work during targeted protein degradation within cells, and it consists of hexamers of AAA+ ATPase (ClpX) and a tetradecameric peptidase(ClpP).

375 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
17 Aug 2012-Science
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that Cdc48 and 20S from the archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum interact to form a functional proteasome, which is an abundant and essential double-ring AAA+ molecular machine ubiquitously present in archaea and in eukarya.
Abstract: Proteasomes are the major energy-dependent proteolytic machines in the eukaryotic and archaeal domains of life. To execute protein degradation, the 20S core peptidase combines with the AAA+ ring of the 19S regulatory particle in eukarya or with the AAA+ proteasome-activating nucleotidase ring in some archaea. Here, we find that Cdc48 and 20S from the archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum interact to form a functional proteasome. Cdc48 is an abundant and essential double-ring AAA+ molecular machine ubiquitously present in archaea, where its function has been uncertain, and in eukarya where Cdc48 participates by largely unknown mechanisms in diverse cellular processes, including multiple proteolytic pathways. Thus, proteolysis in collaboration with the 20S peptidase may represent an ancestral function of the Cdc48 family.

114 citations


01 Jul 2012
TL;DR: Proteolysis in collaboration with the 20S peptidase may represent an ancestral function of the Cdc48 family, an abundant and essential double-ring AAA+ molecular machine ubiquitously present in archaea, and in eukarya where CDC48 participates by largely unknown mechanisms in diverse cellular processes.
Abstract: Proteasomes are the major energy-dependent proteolytic machines in the eukaryotic and archaeal domains of life. To execute protein degradation, the 20S core peptidase combines with the AAA+ ring of the 19S regulatory particle in eukarya or with the AAA+ proteasome-activating nucleotidase ring in some archaea. Here, we find that Cdc48 and 20S from the archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum interact to form a functional proteasome. Cdc48 is an abundant and essential double-ring AAA+ molecular machine ubiquitously present in archaea, where its function has been uncertain, and in eukarya where Cdc48 participates by largely unknown mechanisms in diverse cellular processes, including multiple proteolytic pathways. Thus, proteolysis in collaboration with the 20S peptidase may represent an ancestral function of the Cdc48 family.

106 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the AAA+ protein unfoldase ClpX functions as a closed ring and identifies regions required for intersubunit coupling during the ATPase cycle, which may be extended to other AAA+ proteins.
Abstract: A biochemical study reveals the AAA+ protein unfoldase ClpX functions as a closed ring and identifies regions required for intersubunit coupling during the ATPase cycle. These findings provide important insights on the ClpX mechanism that may be extended to other AAA+ proteins. In the Escherichia coli ClpXP protease, a hexameric ClpX ring couples ATP binding and hydrolysis to mechanical protein unfolding and translocation into the ClpP degradation chamber. Rigid-body packing between the small AAA+ domain of each ClpX subunit and the large AAA+ domain of its neighbor stabilizes the hexamer. By connecting the parts of each rigid-body unit with disulfide bonds or linkers, we created covalently closed rings that retained robust activity. A single-residue insertion in the hinge that connects the large and small AAA+ domains and forms part of the nucleotide-binding site uncoupled ATP hydrolysis from productive unfolding. We propose that ATP hydrolysis drives changes in the conformation of one hinge and its flanking domains and that the changes are propagated around the AAA+ ring through the topologically constrained set of rigid-body units and hinges to produce coupled ring motions that power substrate unfolding.

67 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support a model in which substrate binding converts inactive trimers into proteolytically active trimers, and simultaneously leads to cage assembly by enhancing binding of PDZ1 domains in one trimer to PDZ2′ domains in neighboring trimers.
Abstract: DegP, a member of the highly conserved HtrA family, performs quality-control degradation of misfolded proteins in the periplasm of Gram-negative bacteria and is required for high-temperature survival of Escherichia coli. Substrate binding transforms DegP from an inactive oligomer containing two trimers into active polyhedral cages, typically containing four or eight trimers. Although these observations suggest a causal connection, we show that cage assembly and proteolytic activation can be uncoupled. Indeed, DegP variants that remain trimeric, hexameric, or dodecameric in the presence or absence of substrate still display robust and positively cooperative substrate degradation in vitro and, most importantly, sustain high-temperature bacterial growth as well as the wild-type enzyme. Our results support a model in which substrate binding converts inactive trimers into proteolytically active trimers, and simultaneously leads to cage assembly by enhancing binding of PDZ1 domains in one trimer to PDZ2′ domains in neighboring trimers. Thus, both processes depend on substrate binding, but they can be uncoupled without loss of biological function. We discuss potential coupling mechanisms and why cage formation may have evolved if it is not required for DegP proteolysis.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ability of the E. coli Lon protease to unfold and degrade model protein substrates beginning at N‐ terminal, C‐terminal, or internal degrons is explored, suggesting that evolution has diversified rather than optimized the protein unfolding activities of different AAA+ proteases.
Abstract: AAA+ proteases employ a hexameric ring that harnesses the energy of ATP binding and hydrolysis to unfold native substrates and translocate the unfolded polypeptide into an interior compartment for degradation. What determines the ability of different AAA+ enzymes to unfold and thus degrade different native protein substrates is currently uncertain. Here, we explore the ability of the E. coli Lon protease to unfold and degrade model protein substrates beginning at N-terminal, C-terminal, or internal degrons. Lon has historically been viewed as a weak unfoldase, but we demonstrate robust and processive unfolding/degradation of some substrates with very stable protein domains, including mDHFR and titinI27. For some native substrates, Lon is a more active unfoldase than related AAA+ proteases, including ClpXP and ClpAP. For other substrates, this relationship is reversed. Thus, unfolding activity does not appear to be an intrinsic enzymatic property. Instead, it depends on the specific protease and substrate, suggesting that evolution has diversified rather than optimized the protein unfolding activities of different AAA+ proteases.

49 citations


01 Dec 2012
TL;DR: It is shown that all subunits of the trimeric DegS protease experience a strongly coupled energetic landscape and that OMP-peptide binding to a single PDZ domain stimulates active-site chemical modification and proteolytic cleavage in the attached and neighboring protease domains.
Abstract: Allosteric conformations and proteolytic activities of each subunit of the trimeric E. coli DegS protease share a cooperatively coupled energy landscape that allows regulation via the binding of substrate and OMP peptides.

36 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that the N‐terminal residues of an Arc substrate initially bind in the HslU axial pore, with key contacts mediated by a pore loop that is highly conserved in all AAA+ unfoldases.
Abstract: In the AAA+ HslUV protease, substrates are bound and unfolded by a ring hexamer of HslU, before translocation through an axial pore and into the HslV degradation chamber. Here, we show that the N-terminal residues of an Arc substrate initially bind in the HslU axial pore, with key contacts mediated by a pore loop that is highly conserved in all AAA+ unfoldases. Disordered loops from the six intermediate domains of the HslU hexamer project into a funnel-shaped cavity above the pore and are positioned to contact protein substrates. Mutations in these I-domain loops increase KM and decrease Vmax for degradation, increase the mobility of bound substrates, and prevent substrate stimulation of ATP hydrolysis. HslU-ΔI has negligible ATPase activity. Thus, the I domain plays an active role in coordinating substrate binding, ATP hydrolysis, and protein degradation by the HslUV proteolytic machine.

18 citations


01 May 2012
TL;DR: It is proposed that ATP hydrolysis drives changes in the conformation of one hinge and its flanking domains and that the changes are propagated around the AAA+ ring through the topologically constrained set of rigid-body units and hinges to produce coupled ring motions that power substrate unfolding.
Abstract: A biochemical study reveals the AAA+ protein unfoldase ClpX functions as a closed ring and identifies regions required for intersubunit coupling during the ATPase cycle. These findings provide important insights on the ClpX mechanism that may be extended to other AAA+ proteins. In the Escherichia coli ClpXP protease, a hexameric ClpX ring couples ATP binding and hydrolysis to mechanical protein unfolding and translocation into the ClpP degradation chamber. Rigid-body packing between the small AAA+ domain of each ClpX subunit and the large AAA+ domain of its neighbor stabilizes the hexamer. By connecting the parts of each rigid-body unit with disulfide bonds or linkers, we created covalently closed rings that retained robust activity. A single-residue insertion in the hinge that connects the large and small AAA+ domains and forms part of the nucleotide-binding site uncoupled ATP hydrolysis from productive unfolding. We propose that ATP hydrolysis drives changes in the conformation of one hinge and its flanking domains and that the changes are propagated around the AAA+ ring through the topologically constrained set of rigid-body units and hinges to produce coupled ring motions that power substrate unfolding.

13 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support a power-stroke model of denaturation in which successful unfolding requires mechanical pulling by the enzyme to coincide with transient stochastic protein destabilization.

1 citations