Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

ATP-dependent proteases degrade denatured or misfolded proteins and are recruited for the controlled removal of proteins that block activation of regulatory pathways. Among the ATP-dependent proteases, those of the Clp family are particularly important for the growth and development of Bacillus subtilis. Proteolytic subunit ClpP, together with regulatory ATPase subunit ClpC or ClpX, is required for the normal response to stress, for development of genetic competence, and for sporulation. The spx (formally yjbD) gene was previously identified as a site of mutations that suppress defects in competence conferred by clpP and clpX. The level of Spx in wild-type cells grown in competence medium is low, and that in clpP mutants is high. This suggests that the Spx protein is a substrate for ClpP-containing proteases and that accumulation of Spx might be partly responsible for the observed pleiotropic phenotype resulting from the clpP mutation. In this study we examined, both in vivo and in vitro, which ClpP protease is responsible for degradation of Spx. Western blot analysis showed that Spx accumulated in clpX mutant to the same level as that observed in the clpP mutant. In contrast, a very low concentration of Spx was detected in a clpC mutant. An in vitro proteolysis experiment using purified proteins demonstrated that Spx was degraded by ClpCP but only in the presence of one of the ClpC adapter proteins, MecA or YpbH. However, ClpXP, either in the presence or in the absence of MecA and YpbH, was unable to degrade Spx. Transcription of spx, as measured by expression of spx-lacZ, was slightly increased by the clpX mutation. To exclude a possible effect of clpX and clpP on spx transcription, the spx gene was placed under the control of the IPTG (isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside)-inducible Pspac promoter. In this strain, Spx accumulated when ClpX or ClpP was absent, suggesting that ClpX and ClpP are required for degradation of Spx. Taken together, these results suggest that Spx is degraded by both ClpCP and ClpXP. The putative proteolysis by ClpXP might require another adapter protein. Spx probably is degraded by ClpCP under as yet unidentified conditions. This study suggests that the level of Spx is tightly controlled by two different ClpP proteases.
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PMID:Multiple pathways of Spx (YjbD) proteolysis in Bacillus subtilis. 1205 62

ATP-dependent proteases of the ClpP type are widespread in eubacteria. These proteolytic complexes are composed of a proteolytic subunit and an ATPase subunit. They are involved in the degradation of denatured proteins, but also play a role in specific regulatory pathways. In Streptomyces lividans strains which lack the proteolytic subunit ClpP1, cell cycle progression has been shown to be blocked at early stages of growth. In this study, we examined the role of the ATPase subunit ClpX, a possible partner of the products of the clpP1 operon. A clpX mutant was obtained and it was shown that its growth was impaired only on acidic medium. Thus, the clpX phenotype differs from the clpP1 phenotype, indicating that these two components have only partially overlapping roles. We also analyzed the expression of clpX. Although clpX expression is increased under heat-shock conditions in many bacteria, we found that this is not the case in S. lividans.
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PMID:The ATPase ClpX is conditionally involved in the morphological differentiation of Streptomyces lividans. 1258 31

ClpXP is a protease involved in DNA damage repair, stationary-phase gene expression, and ssrA-mediated protein quality control. To date, however, only a handful of ClpXP substrates have been identified. Using a tagged and inactive variant of ClpP, substrates of E. coli ClpXP were trapped in vivo, purified, and identified by mass spectrometry. The more than 50 trapped proteins include transcription factors, metabolic enzymes, and proteins involved in the starvation and oxidative stress responses. Analysis of the sequences of the trapped proteins revealed five recurring motifs: two located at the C terminus of proteins, and three N-terminal motifs. Deletion analysis, fusion proteins, and point mutations established that sequences from each motif class targeted proteins for degradation by ClpXP. These results represent a description of general rules governing substrate recognition by a AAA+ family ATPase and suggest strategies for regulation of protein degradation.
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PMID:Proteomic discovery of cellular substrates of the ClpXP protease reveals five classes of ClpX-recognition signals. 1266 50

Clp proteolytic complexes are essential for virulence and for survival under stress conditions in several pathogenic bacteria. Recently, a study using signature-tagged mutagenesis identified the ClpX ATPase as also being required for virulence in Staphylococcus aureus. Presently, we have constructed deletion mutants removing either ClpX or the proteolytic subunit, ClpP, in S. aureus 8325-4 in order to examine a putative link between stress tolerance and virulence. When exposed to stress, we found that, although clpP mutant cells were sensitive to conditions generating misfolded proteins, the absence of ClpX improved survival. In the presence of oxidative stress or at low temperature, both ClpP and ClpX were important for growth. Virulence was examined in a murine skin abscess model and was found to be severely attenuated for both mutants. S. aureus pathogenicity is largely dependent on a set of extracellular and cell wall-associated proteins. In the mutant cells, the amount of alpha-haemolysin (hla) and several other extracellular proteins was greatly decreased, and analysis of hla expression revealed that the reduction occurred at the transcriptional level. Essential for transcriptional regulation of hla is the quorum-sensing agr locus. Interestingly, the absence of ClpX or ClpP reduced both transcription of the agr effector molecule, RNA III, and the activity of the autoinducing peptide (AIP). In addition, ClpX was required independently of ClpP for transcription of spa encoding Protein A. Thus, our results indicate that ClpX and ClpP contribute to virulence by controlling the activity of major virulence factors rather than by promoting stress tolerance.
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PMID:Alternative roles of ClpX and ClpP in Staphylococcus aureus stress tolerance and virulence. 1279 Nov 39

The heat shock response in bacterial cells is characterized by rapid induction of heat shock protein expression, followed by an adaptation period during which heat shock protein synthesis decreases to a new steady-state level. In this study we found that after a shift to a high temperature the Clp ATPase (ClpE) in Lactococcus lactis is required for such a decrease in expression of a gene negatively regulated by the heat shock regulator (CtsR). Northern blot analysis showed that while a shift to a high temperature in wild-type cells resulted in a temporal increase followed by a decrease in expression of clpP encoding the proteolytic component of the Clp protease complex, this decrease was delayed in the absence of ClpE. Site-directed mutagenesis of the zinc-binding motif conserved in ClpE ATPases interfered with the ability to repress CtsR-dependent expression. Quantification of ClpE by Western blot analysis revealed that at a high temperature ClpE is subjected to ClpP-dependent processing and that disruption of the zinc finger domain renders ClpE more susceptible. Interestingly, this domain resembles the N-terminal region of McsA, which was recently reported to interact with the CtsR homologue in Bacillus subtilis. Thus, our data point to a regulatory role of ClpE in turning off clpP gene expression following temporal heat shock induction, and we propose that this effect is mediated through CtsR.
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PMID:ClpE from Lactococcus lactis promotes repression of CtsR-dependent gene expression. 1292 84

Clp ATPases are unique chaperones that promote protein unfolding and subsequent degradation by proteases. The mechanism by which this occurs is poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that the N-terminal domain of ClpX is a C4-type zinc binding domain (ZBD) involved in substrate recognition. ZBD forms a very stable dimer that is essential for promoting the degradation of some typical ClpXP substrates such as lambdaO and MuA but not GFP-SsrA. Furthermore, experiments indicate that ZBD contains a primary binding site for the lambdaO substrate and for the cofactor SspB. Removal of ZBD from the ClpX sequence renders the ATPase activity of ClpX largely insensitive to the presence of ClpP, substrates, or the SspB cofactor. All these results indicate that ZBD plays an important role in the ClpX mechanism of function and that ATP binding and/or hydrolysis drives a conformational change in ClpX involving ZBD.
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PMID:The N-terminal zinc binding domain of ClpX is a dimerization domain that modulates the chaperone function. 1293 64

ClpX, a heat shock protein 100 chaperone, which acts as the regulatory subunit of the ATP-dependent ClpXP protease, is responsible for intracellular protein remodeling and degradation. To provide a structural basis for a better understanding of the function of the Clp ATPase family, the crystal structures of Helicobacter pylori ClpX, lacking an N-terminal Cys cluster region complexed with ADP, was determined. The overall structure of ClpX is similar to that of heat shock locus U (HslU), consisting of two subdomains, with ADP bound at the subdomain interface. The crystal structure of ClpX reveals that a conserved tripeptide (LGF) is located on the tip of ClpP binding loop extending from the N-terminal subdomain. A hexameric model of ClpX suggests that six tripeptides make hydrophobic contacts with the hydrophobic clefts of the ClpP heptmer asymmetrically. In addition, the nucleotide binding environment provides the structural explanation for the hexameric assembly and the modulation of ATPase activity.
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PMID:Crystal structure of ClpX molecular chaperone from Helicobacter pylori. 1451 95

ClpX (423 amino acids), a member of the Clp/Hsp100 family of molecular chaperones and the protease, ClpP, comprise a multimeric complex supporting targeted protein degradation in Escherichia coli. The ClpX sequence consists of an NH2-terminal zinc binding domain (ZBD) and a COOH-terminal ATPase domain. Earlier, we have demonstrated that the zinc binding domain forms a constitutive dimer that is essential for the degradation of some ClpX substrates such as gammaO and MuA but is not required for the degradation of other substrates such as green fluorescent protein-SsrA. In this report, we present the NMR solution structure of the zinc binding domain dimer. The monomer fold reveals that ZBD is a member of the treble clef zinc finger family, a motif known to facilitate protein-ligand, protein-DNA, and protein-protein interactions. However, the dimeric ZBD structure is not related to any protein structure in the Protein Data Bank. A trimer-of-dimers model of ZBD is presented, which might reflect the closed state of the ClpX hexamer.
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PMID:Solution structure of the dimeric zinc binding domain of the chaperone ClpX. 1452 85

ClpB belongs to the Hsp100/Clp ATPase family. Whereas a homologue of ClpB, ClpA, interacts with and stimulates the peptidase ClpP, ClpB does not associate with peptidases and instead cooperates with DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE in an efficient reactivation of severely aggregated proteins. The major difference between ClpA and ClpB is located in the middle sequence region (MD) that is much longer in ClpB than in ClpA and contains several segments of coiled-coil-like heptad repeats. The function of MD is unknown. We purified the isolated MD fragment of ClpB from Escherichia coli (residues 410-570). Circular dichroism (CD) detected a high population of alpha-helical structure in MD. Temperature-induced changes in CD showed that MD is a thermodynamically stable folding domain. Sedimentation equilibrium showed that MD is monomeric in solution. We produced four truncated variants of ClpB with deletions of the following heptad-repeat-containing regions in MD: 417-455, 456-498, 496-530, and 531-569. We found that the removal of each heptad-repeat region within MD strongly inhibited the oligomerization of ClpB, which produced low ATPase activity of the truncated ClpB variants as well as their low chaperone activity in vivo. Only one ClpB variant (Delta417-455) could partially complement the growth defect of the clpB-null E. coli strain at 50 degrees C. Our results show that heptad repeats in MD play an important role in stabilization of the active oligomeric form of ClpB. The heptad repeats are likely involved in stabilization of an intra-MD helical bundle rather than an intersubunit coiled coil.
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PMID:Structure and function of the middle domain of ClpB from Escherichia coli. 1464 Jun 92

Clp-controlled proteolysis in Bacillus subtilis seems to play a substantial role, particularly under stress conditions. Calibrated Western blot analyses were used to estimate the approximate numbers of heat-inducible Clp molecules within a single cell. According to these numbers, the different Clp ATPases do not seem to compete for the proteolytic subunit ClpP. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed the predicted specific ClpX-ClpP, ClpC-ClpP, and ClpE-ClpP interactions. ClpE and ClpX are rapidly degraded in wild-type cells during permanent heat stress but remained almost stable in a clpP mutant, suggesting ClpP-dependent degradation. In particular, ClpCP appeared to be involved in the degradation of the short-lived ClpE ATPase, indicating a negative "autoregulatory" circuit for this particular Clp ATPase at the posttranslational level. Analysis of the half-life of stress-inducible clp mRNAs during exponential growth and heat shock revealed precise regulation of the synthesis of each Clp protein at the posttranscriptional level as well to meet the needs of B. subtilis.
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PMID:Fine-tuning in regulation of Clp protein content in Bacillus subtilis. 1467 37


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