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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clpB gene in Escherichia coli encodes a heat-shock protein that is a close homolog of the clpA gene product. The latter is the
ATPase
subunit of the multimeric ATP-dependent
protease Ti
(Clp) in E. coli, which also contains the 21-kDa proteolytic subunit (
ClpP
). The clpB gene product has been purified to near homogeneity by DEAE-Sepharose and heparin-agarose column chromatographies. The purified ClpB consists of a major 93-kDa protein and a minor 79-kDa polypeptide as analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Upon gel filtration on a Superose-6 column, it behaves as a 350-kDa protein. Thus, ClpB appears to be a tetrameric complex of the 93-kDa subunit. The purified ClpB has
ATPase
activity which is stimulated 5-10-fold by casein. It is also activated by insulin, but not by other proteins, including globin and denatured bovine serum albumin. ClpB cleaves adenosine 5'-(alpha,beta-methylene)-triphosphate as rapidly as ATP, but not adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-methylene)-triphosphate. GTP, CTP, and UTP are hydrolyzed 15-25% as well as ATP. ADP strongly inhibits ATP hydrolysis with a Ki of 34 microM. ClpB has a Km for ATP of 1.1 mM, and casein increases its Vmax for ATP without affecting its Km. A Mg2+ concentration of 3 mM is necessary for half-maximal ATP hydrolysis. Mn2+ supports
ATPase
activity as well as Mg2+, and Ca2+ has about 20% their activity. Anti-ClpB antiserum does not cross-react with ClpA nor does anti-ClpA antiserum react with ClpB. In addition, ClpB cannot replace ClpA in supporting the casein-degrading activity of
ClpP
. Thus, ClpB is distinct from ClpA in its structural and biochemical properties despite the similarities in their sequences.
...
PMID:The heat-shock protein ClpB in Escherichia coli is a protein-activated ATPase. 140 Mar 61
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)
...
PMID:ATP-promoted interaction between Clp A and Clp P in activation of Clp protease from Escherichia coli. 178 5
The
ATP-dependent Clp protease
of Escherichia coli contains two dissimilar components: the Clp A regulatory polypeptide, with two ATP binding sites and intrinsic
ATPase
activity, and the Clp P subunit, which contains the proteolytic active site. The DNA sequence of the clpP gene predicts a protein of 207 amino acids (Mr 21,679), which is in close agreement with the size determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis of purified Clp P. Clp P has a native Mr of approximately 240,000, and electron micrographs of the protein show superimposed disk-like structures with a central cavity, similar in appearance to purified proteasomes from eukaryotic cells. Clp P is synthesized with a 14-amino acid leader which is rapidly cleaved in vivo to yield the 193-amino acid protein which has activity in vitro. The clpP gene is at 10 min on the E. coli map, close to that for the ATP-dependent Lon protease of E. coli and far from the gene for clpA. Primer extension experiments indicate that transcription initiates immediately upstream of the coding region for Clp P, with a major transcription start at 120 bases in front of the start of translation. Insertion mutations in clpP have been isolated and transferred to the chromosome; strains devoid of Clp P are viable in the presence or absence of Lon protease. Mutations in clpP stabilize the same Clp A-beta-galactosidase fusion protein specifically stabilized by clpA mutations, providing the first genetic evidence that Clp A and Clp P act together in vivo.
...
PMID:Sequence and structure of Clp P, the proteolytic component of the ATP-dependent Clp protease of Escherichia coli. 219 75
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.
...
PMID:Protease Ti from Escherichia coli requires ATP hydrolysis for protein breakdown but not for hydrolysis of small peptides. 264 53
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.
...
PMID:Protease Ti, a new ATP-dependent protease in Escherichia coli, contains protein-activated ATPase and proteolytic functions in distinct subunits. 296 16
The ATP-binding component (Component II, hereafter referred to as ClpA) of a two-component, ATP-dependent protease from Escherichia coli has been purified to homogeneity. ClpA is a protein with subunit Mr 81,000. It has an intrinsic
ATPase
activity and activates degradation of protein substrates only in the presence of a second component (Component I, hereafter referred to as
ClpP
), Mg2+, and ATP. The amount of ClpA varies by less than a factor of 2 in cells grown in different media and at temperatures from 30 to 42 degrees C. ClpA does not appear to be a heat-shock protein since its synthesis is not dependent on htpR. Antibodies against purified ClpA were used to identify lambda transducing phage bearing the clpA gene. The cloned gene contains a DNA sequence expected to code for the first 28 amino acids of ClpA, which were determined by protein sequencing of purified ClpA. The clpA gene in the phage was mutated by insertion of delta kan defective transposons and the mutations were transferred to E. coli by homologous recombination. The clpA gene was mapped to 19 min on the E. coli chromosome. Mutant cells with insertions early in the gene produce no ClpA protein detectable in Western blots, and extracts of such mutant cells have no detectable ClpA activity. clpA- mutants grow well under all conditions tested and are not defective in turnover of proteins during nitrogen starvation nor in the turnover of such highly unstable proteins as the lambda proteins O, N, and cII, or the E. coli proteins SulA, RcsA, and glutamate dehydrogenase. The degradation of abnormal canavanine-containing proteins is defective in clpA mutants especially in cells that also have a lon- mutation. Extracts of clpA- lon- cells have ATP-dependent casein degrading activity.
...
PMID:The two-component, ATP-dependent Clp protease of Escherichia coli. Purification, cloning, and mutational analysis of the ATP-binding component. 304 6
The energy requirement for protein breakdown in Escherichia coli has generally been attributed to the ATP-dependence of protease La, the lon gene product. We have partially purified another ATP-dependent protease from lon-cells that lack protease La (as shown by immunoblotting). This enzyme hydrolyzes [3H]methyl-casein to acid-soluble products in the presence of ATP and Mg2+. ATP hydrolysis appears necessary for proteolytic activity. Since this enzyme is inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate, it appears to be a serine protease, but it also contains essential thiol residues. We propose to name this enzyme
protease Ti
. It differs from protease La in nucleotide specificity, inhibitor sensitivity, and subunit composition. On gel filtration,
protease Ti
has an apparent molecular weight of 370,000. It can be fractionated by phosphocellulose chromatography or by DEAE chromatography into two components with apparent molecular weights of 260,000 and 140,000. When separated, they do not show proteolytic activity. One of these components, by itself, has
ATPase
activity and is labile in the absence of ATP. The other contains the diisopropyl fluorophosphate-sensitive proteolytic site. These results and the similar findings of Katayama-Fujimura et al. [Katayama-Fujimura, Y., Gottesman, S. & Maurizi, M. R. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 4477-4485] indicate that E. coli contains two ATP-hydrolyzing proteases, which differ in many biochemical features and probably in their physiological roles.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli contains a soluble ATP-dependent protease (Ti) distinct from protease La. 330 28
A cDNA representing the plastid-encoded homolog of the prokaryotic ATP-dependent protease
ClpP
was amplified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, cloned, and sequenced.
ClpP
and a previously isolated cDNA designated ClpC, encoding an
ATPase
related to proteins encoded by the ClpA/B gene family, were expressed in Escherichia coli. Antibodies directed against these recombinant proteins recognized proteins in a wide variety of organisms. N-terminal analysis of the Clp protein isolated from crude leaf extracts showed that the N-terminal methionine is absent from
ClpP
and that the transit peptide is cleaved from ClpC. A combination of chloroplast subfractionation and immunolocalization showed that in Arabidopsis,
ClpP
and ClpC localize to the stroma of the plastid. Immunoblot analyses indicated that
ClpP
and ClpC are constitutively expressed in all tissues of Arabidopsis at levels equivalent to those of E. coli
ClpP
and ClpA.
ClpP
, immunopurified from tobacco extracts, hydrolyzed N-succinyl-Leu-Tyr-amidomethylcoumarin, a substrate of E. coli
ClpP
. Purified recombinant ClpC facilitated the degradation of 3H-methylcasein by E. coli
ClpP
in an ATP-dependent fashion. This demonstrates that ClpC is a functional homolog of E. coli ClpA and not of ClpB or ClpX. These data represent the only in vitro demonstration of the activity of a specific ATP-dependent chloroplast protease reported to date.
...
PMID:The stroma of higher plant plastids contain ClpP and ClpC, functional homologs of Escherichia coli ClpP and ClpA: an archetypal two-component ATP-dependent protease. 758 Feb 59
The Escherichia coli ATP-dependent
caseinolytic protease
(Clp) is composed of two distinct subunits; protease,
ClpP
, and
ATPase
, ClpA. Active
ClpP
has been overexpressed to approximately 50% of soluble protein in E. coli, and purified to homogeneity. Direct mass determination of individual particles using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) yields a mean native molecular mass of 305 +/- 9 kDa for the
ClpP
oligomer, suggesting that it has a tetradecameric structure. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) curves were determined for
ClpP
in solution at concentrations of 1-10 mg/mL. A combination of STEM and SAXS data was used to derive a model for
ClpP
, comprising a cylindrical oligomer about 100 A in diameter and about 75 A in height with an axial pore about 32-36 A in diameter. The volume of the pore is estimated to be approximately 70,000 A3, similar in size to those found in chaperone proteins, and is large enough to accommodate unfolded polypeptide chains, although most globular folded proteins would be excluded.
...
PMID:Scanning transmission electron microscopy and small-angle scattering provide evidence that native Escherichia coli ClpP is a tetradecamer with an axial pore. 766 72
ClpA is the
ATPase
component of the ATP-dependent
protease Ti
(Clp) in Escherichia coli and contains two ATP-binding sites. A ClpA variant (referred to as ClpAT) carrying threonine in place of the 169th methionine has recently been shown to be highly soluble but indistinguishable from the wild-type, 84-kDa ClpA in its ability to hydrolyze ATP and to support the casein-degrading activity of
ClpP
. Therefore, site-directed mutagenesis was performed to generate mutations in either of the two ATP-binding sites of ClpAT (i.e. to replace the Lys220 or Lys501 with Thr). ClpAT/K220T hydrolyzed ATP and supported the
ClpP
-mediated proteolysis 10-50% as well as ClpAT depending on ATP concentration, while ClpAT/K501T was unable to cleave ATP or to support the proteolysis. Without ATP, ClpAT and both of its mutant forms behaved as trimeric molecules as analyzed by gel filtration on a Sephacryl S-300 column. With 0.5 mM ATP, ClpAT and ClpAT/K501T became hexamers, but ClpAT/K220T remained trimeric. With 2 mM ATP, however, ClpAT/K220T also behaved as a hexamer. These results suggest that the first ATP-binding site of ClpA is responsible for hexamer formation, while the second is essential for ATP hydrolysis. When trimeric ClpAT/K220T was incubated with the same amount of hexameric ClpAT/K501T (i.e. at 0.5 mM ATP) and then subjected to gel filtration as above, a majority of ClpAT/K220T ran together with ClpAT/K501T as hexameric molecules. Furthermore, ClpAT/K501T in the mixture strongly inhibited the ability of ClpAT/K220T to cleave ATP and to support the
ClpP
-mediated proteolysis. Similar results were obtained in the presence of 2 mM ATP and also with the mixture with ClpAT. On the other hand, the
ATPase
activity of the mixture of ClpAT and ClpAT/K220T was significantly higher than the sum of that of each protein, particularly in the presence of 2 mM ATP, although its ability to support the proteolysis by
ClpP
remained unchanged. These results suggest that a rapid exchange of the subunits, possibly as a trimeric unit, occurs between the ClpAT proteins in the presence of ATP and leads to the formation of mixed hexameric molecules.
...
PMID:Distinctive roles of the two ATP-binding sites in ClpA, the ATPase component of protease Ti in Escherichia coli. 771 11
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