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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 ATP-dependent casein hydrolysis by
protease Ti
(ClpAP) has been shown to be inhibited by sulfhydryl blocking agents, such as N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), when preincubated with ClpA but not with
ClpP
. To define the role of three Cys residues in ClpA, site-directed mutagenesis was performed to substitute each of them with Ser or Ala. None of the mutations showed any effect on the
ATPase
activity of ClpA or its ability to support the casein degradation by
ClpP
. However, NEM could no longer block the ability of ClpA/C47S or ClpA/C47A in supporting the
ClpP
-mediated proteolysis, unlike that of ClpA, ClpA/C203S, or ClpA/C243S. Furthermore, in the presence of NEM, casein could stimulate the
ATPase
activities of ClpA/C47S and ClpA/C47A and protect from their degradation by
ClpP
, but not of the other ClpA proteins. These results suggest that the inhibitory effect of NEM is due to prevention of the interaction of ClpA with casein by introduction of a bulky alkyl group to Cys47, but not linked to the catalytic function of the
ATPase
.
...
PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the Cys residues in ClpA, the ATPase component of protease Ti (ClpAP) in Escherichia coli. 937 93
A cDNA, ERD1, isolated from one-hour-dehydrated plants of Arabidopsis thaliana L. encodes a putative protein that is similar to the regulatory
ATPase
subunit (ClpA) of the
Clp protease
and contains a putative chloroplast-targeting transit-peptide at the N-terminus. A chimeric gene with the putative plastid-targeting sequence of the erd1 gene fused to the synthetic green-fluorescent protein (sGFP) gene was constructed and introduced into Arabidopsis protoplasts. The N-terminal region of the ERD1 protein directed the sGFP protein into the plastids of the protoplasts, and functioned as a transit peptide. Northern blot analysis indicated that expression of the erd1 gene was induced not only by water stress, such as dehydration and high salinity, but also by natural senescence and dark-induced etiolation. The erd1 gene was not strongly induced by exogenous abscisic acid. A chimeric gene with the 0.9 kb promoter region of the erd1 gene fused to the beta-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene was constructed, and tobacco plants transformed with the construct. The GUS reporter gene driven by the erd1 promoter was induced by dehydration and high salt stress at significant levels in the transgenic plants. The GUS gene was strongly expressed in older leaves without dehydration, and was induced by dark-induced etiolation. Furthermore, GUS activity was reduced by cytokinin treatment during dark-induced etiolation. These results indicate that expression of the erd1 gene is developmentally up-regulated by senescence as well as by water stress.
...
PMID:A nuclear gene, erd1, encoding a chloroplast-targeted Clp protease regulatory subunit homolog is not only induced by water stress but also developmentally up-regulated during senescence in Arabidopsis thaliana. 937 97
The Bacillus subtilis clpP gene, encoding the proteolytic component of the Clp or Ti protease, was cloned and sequenced. The amount of clpP-specific mRNA increased after heat shock, salt and ethanol stress, as well as after treatment with puromycin. Two transcriptional start sites upstream of the clpP structural gene were identified, preceded by sequences resembling the consensus sequences of promoters recognized by sigmaA and sigmaB transcriptional factors of the B. subtilis RNA polymerase respectively. Transcription initiation occurred predominantly at the putative sigmaA-dependent promoter in exponentially growing cells and was induced under stress conditions. After exposure to stress, initiation of transcription also increased at the sigmaB-dependent promoter, but to a lesser extent, indicating that clpP belongs to a double promoter-controlled subgroup of class III general stress genes in B. subtilis. In a sigB mutant strain, clpP remained heat and stress inducible at the sigmaA-dependent promoter. BgaB-reporter gene fusions, carrying either the sigmaA- or the sigmaB-dependent promoter, showed a higher bgaB induction at the sigmaA-dependent promoter, whereas a significantly lower level of induction was measured at the sigmaB-dependent promoter. The sigmaA-dependent promoter appeared to be crucial for the heat-inducible transcription of clpP. A CIRCE (controlling inverted repeat of chaperone expression) element, the characteristic regulation target of class I heat shock genes such as dnaK and groESL, was not found between the transcriptional and translational start sites. Mutants lacking either the proteolytic component
ClpP
or the regulatory
ATPase
component ClpX were phenotypically distinct from the wild type. Both mutants produced chains of elongated cells and exhibited severely impaired growth under stress conditions and starvation. Comparison of two-dimensional protein gels from wild-type cells with those from clpP and clpX mutant cells revealed several changes in the protein pattern. Several proteins, such as GroEL, PpiB, PykA, SucD, YhfP, YqkF, YugJ and YvyD, which were found preferentially in higher amounts in both clpP and clpX mutants, might be potential substrates for the ClpXP protease.
...
PMID:Stress induction of the Bacillus subtilis clpP gene encoding a homologue of the proteolytic component of the Clp protease and the involvement of ClpP and ClpX in stress tolerance. 964 46
Proteolytic inactivation of key regulatory proteins is essential in eukaryotic cell-cycle control. We have identified a protease in the eubacterium Caulobacter crescentus that is indispensable for viability and cell-cycle progression, indicating that proteolysis is also involved in controlling the bacterial cell cycle. Mutants of Caulobacter that lack the ATP-dependent serine protease ClpXP are arrested in the cell cycle before the initiation of chromosome replication and are blocked in the cell division process. ClpXP is composed of two types of polypeptides, the ClpX
ATPase
and the
ClpP
peptidase. Site-directed mutagenesis of the catalytically active serine residue of
ClpP
confirmed that the proteolytic activity of ClpXP is essential. Analysis of mutants lacking ClpX or
ClpP
revealed that both proteins are required in vivo for the cell-cycle-dependent degradation of the regulatory protein CtrA. CtrA is a member of the response regulator family of two-component signal transduction systems and controls multiple cell-cycle processes in Caulobacter. In particular, CtrA negatively controls DNA replication and our findings suggest that specific degradation of the CtrA protein by the ClpXP protease contributes to G1-to-S transition in this organism.
...
PMID:An essential protease involved in bacterial cell-cycle control. 975 66
ClpAP, a typical energy-dependent protease, consists of a proteolytic component (
ClpP
) and a chaperone-like
ATPase
(ClpA).
ClpP
is composed of two apposed heptameric rings, whereas in the presence of ATP or ATPgammaS, ClpA is a single hexameric ring. Formation of ClpAP complexes involves a symmetry mismatch as sixfold ClpA stacks axially on one or both faces of sevenfold
ClpP
. We have analyzed these structures by cryo-electron microscopy. Our three-dimensional reconstruction of ClpA at 29-A resolution shows the monomer to be composed of two domains of similar size that, in the hexamer, form two tiers enclosing a large cavity. Cylindrical reconstruction of ClpAP reveals three compartments: the digestion chamber inside
ClpP
; a compartment between
ClpP
and ClpA; and the cavity inside ClpA. They are connected axially via narrow apertures, implying that substrate proteins should be unfolded to allow translocation into the digestion chamber. The cavity inside ClpA is structurally comparable to the "Anfinsen cage" of other chaperones and may play a role in the unfolding of substrates. A geometrical description of the symmetry mismatch was obtained by using our model of ClpA and the crystal structure of
ClpP
(Wang et al., 1997, Cell 91, 447-456) to identify the particular side views presented by both molecules in individual complexes. The interaction is characterized by a key pair of subunits, one of each protein. A small turn (8.6(o) = 2pi/42; equivalent to a 4-A shift) would transfer the key interaction to another pair of subunits. We propose that nucleotide hydrolysis results in rotation, facilitating the processive digestion of substrate proteins.
...
PMID:At sixes and sevens: characterization of the symmetry mismatch of the ClpAP chaperone-assisted protease. 987 79
The Clp proteases represent a large, ancient ATP-dependent protease family which in higher plants is known to be located in chloroplasts. The soluble, presumably multisubunit, enzyme of the organelle stroma is of dual genetic origin. It consists of a nuclear-encoded, regulatory subunit ClpC, which is an
ATPase
, and a plastid-encoded proteolytic subunit
ClpP
, which is a serine protease. An additional, nuclear-encoded proteolytic subunit resembling
ClpP
has been recently reported from tomato (Schaller and Ryan, 1995 plant gene Register 95-00). We demonstrate that in both tomato Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. and Arabidopsis thaliana, (L.) Heynh. the nuclear-encoded
ClpP
(nClpP) is made as a precursor molecule that can be imported into isolated intact chloroplasts of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) and processed in two or three steps, respectively, to the size of the authentic protein. Furthermore, both gel electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions and size-exclusion chromatography verified that the three proteins can form distinct heteromeric supramolecular complexes of approximately 860, 1380 and 1700 kDa (probably also of 600 kDa) molecular mass. The size ranges of the former two are reminiscent of those of Clp complexes described from Escherichia coli. In addition, various complexes between 160 and 560 kDa are detectable with the individual components. Both the processing "intermediates" and the mature nClpP are found in assembled form.
...
PMID:Clp protease complexes and their diversity in chloroplasts. 995 29
The region of the Caulobacter crescentus chromosome harboring the genes for the ClpXP protease was isolated and characterized. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of the C. crescentus
ClpP
and ClpX proteins with those of their homologues from several gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria revealed stronger conservation for the
ATPase
regulatory subunit (ClpX) than for the peptidase subunit (
ClpP
). The C. crescentus clpX gene was shown by complementation analysis to be functional in Escherichia coli. However, clpX from E. coli was not able to substitute for the essential nature of the clpX gene in C. crescentus. The clpP and clpX genes are separated on the C. crescentus chromosome by an open reading frame pointing in the opposite direction from the clp genes, and transcription of clpP and clpX was found to be uncoupled. clpP is transcribed as a monocistronic unit with a promoter (PP1) located immediately upstream of the 5' end of the gene and a terminator structure following its 3' end. PP1 is under heat shock control and is induced upon entry of the cells into the stationary phase. At least three promoters for clpX (PX1, PX2, and PX3) were mapped in the clpP-clpX intergenic region. In contrast to PP1, the clpX promoters were found to be downregulated after heat shock but were also subject to growth phase control. In addition, the clpP and clpX promoters showed different activity patterns during the cell cycle. Together, these results demonstrate that the genes coding for the peptidase and the regulatory subunits of the ClpXP protease are under independent transcriptional control in C. crescentus. Determination of the numbers of
ClpP
and ClpX molecules per cell suggested that ClpX is the limiting component compared with
ClpP
.
...
PMID:Identification and transcriptional control of the genes encoding the Caulobacter crescentus ClpXP protease. 1032 4
In this paper, we present the molecular cloning and characterization of a murine homolog of the Escherichia coli chaperone ClpX. Murine ClpX shares 38% amino acid sequence identity with the E. coli homolog and is a novel member of the Hsp100/Clp family of molecular chaperones. ClpX localizes to human chromosome 15q22.2-22.3 and in mouse is expressed tissue-specifically as one transcript of approximately 2.9 kilobases (kb) predominantly within the liver and as two isoforms of approximately 2.6 and approximately 2.9 kb within the testes. Purified recombinant ClpX displays intrinsic
ATPase
activity, with a Km of approximately 25 microM and a Vmax of approximately 660 pmol min-1 microgram-1, which is active over a broad range of pH, temperature, ethanol, and salt parameters. Substitution of lysine 300 with alanine in the
ATPase
domain P-loop abolishes both ATP hydrolysis and binding. Recombinant ClpX can also interact with its putative partner protease subunit
ClpP
in overexpression experiments in 293T cells. Subcellular studies by confocal laser scanning microscopy localized murine ClpX green fluorescent protein fusions to the mitochondria. Deletion of the N-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequence abolished mitochondrial compartmentalization. Our results thus suggest that murine ClpX acts as a tissue-specific mammalian mitochondrial chaperone that may play a role in mitochondrial protein homeostasis.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of a mouse homolog of bacterial ClpX, a novel mammalian class II member of the Hsp100/Clp chaperone family. 1034 88
ClpA, a member of the Clp/Hsp100 family of ATPases, is both an ATP-dependent molecular chaperone and the regulatory component of ClpAP protease. We demonstrate that chaperone and protease activities occur concurrently in ClpAP complexes during a single round of RepA binding to ClpAP and ATP-dependent release. This result was substantiated with a ClpA mutant, ClpA(K220V), carrying an amino acid substitution in the N-terminal ATP binding site. ClpA(K220V) is unable to activate RepA, but the presence of
ClpP
or chemically inactivated
ClpP
restores its ability to activate RepA. The presence of
ClpP
simultaneously facilitates degradation of RepA.
ClpP
must remain bound to ClpA(K220V) for these effects, indicating that both chaperone and proteolytic activities of the mutant complex occur concurrently. ClpA(K220V) itself is able to form stable complexes with RepA in the presence of a poorly hydrolyzed ATP analog, adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate), and to release RepA upon exchange of adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) with ATP. However, the released RepA is inactive in DNA binding, indicating that the N-terminal ATP binding site is essential for the chaperone activity of ClpA. Taken together, these results suggest that substrates bound to the complex of the proteolytic and
ATPase
components can be partitioned between release/reactivation and translocation/degradation.
...
PMID:Concurrent chaperone and protease activities of ClpAP and the requirement for the N-terminal ClpA ATP binding site for chaperone activity. 1038 42
Clp protease
is a highly selective protease in E. coli, which consists of two types of subunits, the regulatory subunit with
ATPase
activity, ClpA, and the catalytic subunit,
ClpP
. In order to examine the possible association of plant
Clp protease
with the degradation of protein in senescing chloroplasts, we isolated a cDNA clone for ClpC which is a plant homologue of ClpA from Arabidopsis thaliana in addition to ERD1 which we had isolated earlier [Kiyosue et al. (1993) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 196: 1214]. We also isolated a clone for the plastidic gene, clpP (pclpP) and cDNA clones for putative nuclear clpP genes (nclpP1-6). We analyzed the expression of these clp genes in Arabidopsis leaves after various dark periods and during natural senescence. The expression of erd1 was increased by dark-induced and by natural senescence, as reported earlier [Nakashima et al. (1997) Plant J. 12: 851], while that of AtclpC was decreased. Two catalytic subunits nclpPs (nclpP3 and nclpP5) showed high expression in naturally senescing leaves, but the expression of pclpP and the other nclpPs was not changed. Immunoblot analysis of chloroplast protein and in vitro import analysis demonstrated that both nucleus-encoded regulatory subunits as well as nClpP5 were localized in the chloroplast stroma. These observations suggest that chloroplast
Clp protease
is composed of very complicated combinations of subunits, and that ERD1, nClpP5 and pClpP have a role in the concerted degradation of protein in senescing chloroplasts.
...
PMID:Identification of clp genes expressed in senescing Arabidopsis leaves. 1042 73
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