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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 sequencing data were analyzed for two regions of the 120-MDa plasmid (p120) of Azospirillum brasilense Sp245. The 2420-bp region I, which flanks the omegon insertion in the SK048 mutant defective in production of the polar flagellum (Fla-) and swarming (Swa-), was shown to contain a cluster of two open reading frames (orf) that possess properties of coding sequences (CDSs). The NtrA (sigma 54) boxes were found in their upstream regions. The products of orf1 and orf2 are 16.5 and 15.5 kDa in molecular weight and consist of 151 and 152 amino-acid residues, respectively. The PRF1 polypeptide was found to contain a region homologous to the cysteine- and glycine-rich zinc-binding domain of the
DnaJ
heat-shock protein. ORF2 showed a homology to Haemophilus ducreyi pilin, fragments of Streptomyces and Mycobacterium integral membrane proteins, and eukaryotic transcriptional regulators. The omegon proved to be inserted into orfX1/X2 which possibly has a deletion and shows a GC content untypical for A. brasilense genes. The deduced ORFX2 polypeptide is homologous to fragments of arsenite-translocating
ATPase
and signal-transducing histidine kinase of archaebacteria. Possible causes of the Fla-Swa- phenotype of the A. brasilense SK048 mutant are considered. One coding orf was identified in the 1194-bp region II located approximately 4 kb away from the omegon insertion. The N-terminal region of the deduced product of this partly sequenced orf was shown to contain a signal sequence typical for secreted proteins.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of genes identified in the 120 MDa plasmid DNA in a mutant of Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 bacteria, defective in polar flagellation and swarming]. 1185 90
The ability of two high-affinity Hsc70-binding peptides [FYQLALT (peptide-Phi) and NIVRKKK (peptide-K)] to differentially inhibit Hsc70-dependent processes in rabbit reticulocyte lysate (RRL) was examined. Both peptide-Phi and peptide-K inhibited chaperone-dependent renaturation of luciferase in RRL. Peptide-Phi, but not peptide-K, blocked Hsp90/Hsc70-dependent transformation of the heme-regulated eIF2 alpha kinase (HRI) into an active, heme-regulatable kinase. In contrast, peptide-K, but not peptide-Phi, inhibited Hsc70-mediated suppression of the activation of mature-transformed HRI. Furthermore, HDJ2 (Human
DnaJ
homologue 2), but not HDJ1, potentiated the ability of Hsc70 to suppress the activation of HRI in RRL. Mechanistically, peptide-K inhibited, while peptide-Phi enhanced, HDJ2-induced stimulation of Hsc70
ATPase
activity in vitro. The data presented support the hypotheses that peptide-Phi acts to inhibit Hsc70 function by binding to the hydrophobic peptide-binding cleft of Hsc70, while peptide-K acts through binding to a site that modulates the interaction of Hsc70 with
DnaJ
homologues. Overall, the data indicate that peptide-Phi and peptide-K have differential effects on Hsc70 functions under quasi-physiological conditions in RRL, and suggest that therapeutically valuable peptide mimetics can be designed to inhibit specific functions of Hsc70.
...
PMID:Differential inhibition of Hsc70 activities by two Hsc70-binding peptides. 1188 92
P58(IPK) was discovered as an inhibitor of the interferon-induced, protein kinase, PKR. Upon virus infection, PKR can, as part of the host defense system, inhibit mRNA translation by phosphorylating the alpha subunit of protein synthesis eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2alpha). We previously found that influenza virus recruits the cellular P58(IPK) co-chaperone to inhibit PKR activity and thus facilitate viral protein synthesis. P58(IPK) contains nine tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) motifs in addition to the highly conserved J domain found in all
DnaJ
chaperone family members. To define the role of molecular chaperones in regulating cell growth in addition to PKR regulation, we performed a detailed analysis of the P58(IPK) J domain. Using growth rescue assays, we found that the P58(IPK) J domain substituted for the J domains of other
DnaJ
proteins, including
DnaJ
in Escherichia coli and Ydj1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This is the first time a cellular J domain from a mammalian
DnaJ
family member was shown to be functional in both prokaryotic
DnaJ
and eukaryotic Ydj1 constructs. Furthermore, point mutations within the conserved HPD residue cluster of the P58(IPK) J domain disrupted P58(IPK) J function including stimulation of
ATPase
activity of Hsp70. However, the P58(IPK) HPD mutants still inhibited PKR activity and thus supported cell growth in a yeast rescue assay. Overexpression of the HPD mutants of P58(IPK), similar to their wild-type counterpart, also stimulated mRNA translation in a mammalian cell system. Taken together, our data necessitate a model of P58(IPK) inhibition of PKR kinase activity and stimulation of mRNA translation, which does not require classical J domain function found in the
DnaJ
molecular chaperone family.
...
PMID:Inactivation of the PKR protein kinase and stimulation of mRNA translation by the cellular co-chaperone P58(IPK) does not require J domain function. 1193 89
ClpB is a member of a multichaperone system in Escherichia coli (with DnaK,
DnaJ
, and GrpE) that reactivates aggregated proteins. The sequence of ClpB contains two ATP-binding regions that are enclosed between the N- and C-terminal extensions. Whereas it has been found that the N-terminal region of ClpB is essential for the chaperone activity, the structure of this region is not known, and its biochemical properties have not been studied. We expressed and purified the N-terminal fragment of ClpB (residues 1-147). Circular dichroism of the isolated N-terminal region showed a high content of alpha-helical structure. Differential scanning calorimetry showed that the N-terminal region of ClpB is thermodynamically stable and contains a single folding domain. The N-terminal domain is monomeric, as determined by gel-filtration chromatography, and the elution profile of the N-terminal domain does not change in the presence of the N-terminally truncated ClpB (ClpBDeltaN). This indicates that the N-terminal domain does not form strong contacts with ClpBDeltaN. Consistently, addition of the separated N-terminal domain does not reverse an inhibition of
ATPase
activity of ClpBDeltaN in the presence of casein. As shown by ELISA measurements, full-length ClpB and ClpBDeltaN bind protein substrates (casein, inactivated luciferase) with similar affinity. We also found that the isolated N-terminal domain of ClpB interacts with heat-inactivated luciferase. Taken together, our results indicate that the N-terminal fragment of ClpB forms a distinct domain that is not strongly associated with the ClpB core and is not required for ClpB interactions with other proteins, but may be involved in recognition of protein substrates.
...
PMID:Stability and interactions of the amino-terminal domain of ClpB from Escherichia coli. 1196 75
Escherichia coli Hsp100 ClpB has been identified recently as playing critical roles in multi-chaperone systems. ClpB binds and disaggregates denatured polypeptides by employing ATP hydrolysis and allows other molecular chaperones such as Hsp70 DnaK and Hsp40
DnaJ
to refold the non-native polypeptides. ClpB contains two nucleotide-binding domains (NBD1 and NBD2) in its primary sequence. Walker A and Walker B motifs exist in both nucleotide-binding domains. Therefore, ClpB belongs to the large
ATPase
family known as
ATPase
associated with various cellular activities (AAA). The mechanisms by which NBD1 and NBD2 function to support the ClpB molecular-chaperone activity are currently unknown. To investigate how NBD2 participates in ClpB function to disaggregate denatured proteins, ClpB NBD2 has been cloned and crystallized. The ClpB NBD2 crystals diffract X-rays to 2.5 A using synchrotron X-ray sources. The crystals belong to space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 99.57, b = 149.34, c = 164.69 A.
...
PMID:Cloning, expression, purification and preliminary X-ray crystallographic studies of Escherichia coli Hsp100 nucleotide-binding domain 2 (NBD2). 1203 6
Hsc62 is the third Hsp70 homolog of Escherichia coli, which we found previously. Hsc62 is structurally and biochemically similar to DnaK, but hscC gene encoding Hsc62 did not compensate for the defects in the dnaK-null mutant of E. coli MC4100 strain. We cloned the ybeV gene and purified the gene product named Hsc56, a 55,687-Da protein with a J-domain like sequence. Hsc56 stimulated the
ATPase
activity of only Hsc62 but not those of the other Hsp70 homologs, DnaK and Hsc66. Hsc56 contains the -His-Pro-Glu- sequence corresponding to the His-Pro-Asp motif in
DnaJ
, which is indispensable for
DnaJ
to interact with DnaK. Conversion of -His-Pro-Glu- to -Ala-Ala-Ala- abolished the ability of Hsc56 to stimulate the
ATPase
activity of Hsc62. GrpE, a nucleotide exchange factor for DnaK, also stimulated the
ATPase
activity of Hsc62 in the presence of Hsc56. Hsc62-Hsc56-GrpE is probably a new Hsp70 chaperone system of E. coli.
...
PMID:Hsc62, Hsc56, and GrpE, the third Hsp70 chaperone system of Escherichia coli. 1205 69
ClpB from Escherichia coli is a member of a protein-disaggregating multi-chaperone system that also includes DnaK,
DnaJ
, and GrpE. The sequence of ClpB contains two ATP-binding domains that are enclosed between the amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal regions. The N-terminal sequence region does not contain known functional sequence motifs. Here, we performed site-directed mutagenesis of four polar residues within the N-terminal domain of ClpB (Thr7, Ser84, Asp103 and Glu109). These residues are conserved in several ClpB homologs. We found that the mutations, T7A, S84A, D103A, and E109A did not significantly affect the secondary structure and thermal stability of ClpB, nor did they inhibit the self-association of ClpB, its basal
ATPase
activity, or the enhanced rate of the ATP hydrolysis by ClpB in the presence of poly-L-lysine. We observed, however, that three mutations, T7A, D103A, and E109A, reduced the casein-induced activation of the ClpB
ATPase
. The same three mutant ClpB variants also showed low chaperone activity in the luciferase reactivation assay. We found, however, that the four ClpB mutants, as well as the wild-type, bound similar amounts of inactivated luciferase. In summary, we have identified three essential amino acid residues within the N-terminal region of ClpB that participate in the coupling between a protein-binding signal and the ATP hydrolysis, and also support the chaperone activity of ClpB.
...
PMID:Conserved amino acid residues within the amino-terminal domain of ClpB are essential for the chaperone activity. 1213 37
Hsp70 chaperones assist protein folding processes through nucleotide-controlled cycles of substrate binding and release. In our effort to understand the structure-function relationship within the Hsp70 family of proteins, we characterized the Escherichia coli member of a novel Hsp70 subfamily, HscC, and identified considerable differences to the well studied E. coli homologue, DnaK, which together suggest that HscC is a specialized chaperone. The basal
ATPase
cycle of HscC had k(cat) and K(m) values that were 8- and 10,000-fold higher than for DnaK. The HscC
ATPase
was not affected by the nucleotide exchange factor of DnaK GrpE and stimulated 8-fold by DjlC, a DnaJ protein with a putative transmembrane domain, but not by other
DnaJ
proteins tested. Substrate binding dynamics and substrate specificity differed significantly between HscC and DnaK. These differences are explicable by distinct structural variations. HscC does not have general chaperone activity because it did not assist refolding of a denatured model substrate. In vivo, HscC failed to complement temperature sensitivity of DeltadnaK cells. Deletion of hscC caused a slow growth phenotype that was suppressed after several generations. Triple knock-outs of all E. coli genes encoding Hsp70 proteins (DeltadnaK DeltahscA DeltahscC) were viable, indicating that Hsp70 proteins are not strictly essential for viability. An extensive search for DeltahscC phenotypes revealed a hypersensitivity to Cd(2+) ions and UV irradiation, suggesting roles of HscC in the cellular response to these stress treatments. Together our data show that the Hsp70 structure exhibits an astonishing degree of adaptive variations to accommodate requirements of a specialized function.
...
PMID:Structure-function analysis of HscC, the Escherichia coli member of a novel subfamily of specialized Hsp70 chaperones. 1218 60
ClpB is a member of a multichaperone system in Escherichia coli (with DnaK,
DnaJ
, and GrpE) that reactivates strongly aggregated proteins. The sequence of ClpB contains two ATP-binding domains, each containing Walker consensus motifs. The N- and C-terminal sequence regions of ClpB do not contain known functional motifs. In this study, we performed site-directed mutagenesis of selected charged residues within the Walker A motifs (Lys212 and Lys611) and the C-terminal region of ClpB (Asp797, Arg815, Arg819, and Glu826). We found that the mutations K212T, K611T, D797A, R815A, R819A, and E826A did not significantly affect the secondary structure of ClpB. The mutation of the N-terminal ATP-binding site (K212T), but not of the C-terminal ATP-binding site (K611T), and two mutations within the C-terminal domain (R815A and R819A) inhibited the self-association of ClpB in the absence of nucleotides. The defects in self-association of these mutants were also observed in the presence of ATP and ADP. The four mutants K212T, K611T, R815A, and R819A showed an inhibition of chaperone activity, which correlated with their low
ATPase
activity in the presence of casein. Our results indicate that positively charged amino acids that are located along the intersubunit interface (this includes Lys212 in the Walker A motif of the N-terminal ATP-binding domain as well as Arg815 and Arg819 in the C-terminal domain) participate in intersubunit salt bridges and stabilize the ClpB oligomer. Interestingly, we have identified a conserved residue within the C-terminal domain (Arg819) which does not participate directly in nucleotide binding but is essential for the chaperone activity of ClpB.
...
PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of conserved charged amino acid residues in ClpB from Escherichia coli. 1222 Jan 94
The
DnaJ
(Hsp40) cochaperone regulates the DnaK (Hsp70) chaperone by accelerating ATP hydrolysis in a cycle closely linked to substrate binding and release. The J-domain, the signature motif of the Hsp40 family, orchestrates interaction with the DnaK
ATPase
domain. We studied the J-domain by creating 42 mutant E. coli
DnaJ
variants and examining their phenotypes in various separate in vivo assays, namely, bacterial growth at low and high temperatures, motility, and propagation of bacteriophage lambda. Most mutants studied behaved like wild type in all assays. In addition to the (33)HisProAsp(35) (HPD) tripeptide found in all known functional J-domains, our study uncovered three new single substitution mutations (Y25A, K26A, and F47A) that totally abolish J-domain function. Furthermore, two glycine substitution mutants in an exposed flexible loop (R36G, N37G) showed partial loss of J-domain function alone and complete loss of function as a triple (RNQ-GGG) mutant coupled with the phenotypically silent Q38G. Interestingly, all the essential residues map to a small region on the same solvent-exposed face of the J-domain. Engineered mutations in the corresponding residues of the human Hdj1 J-domain grafted in E. coli
DnaJ
also resulted in loss of function, suggesting an evolutionarily conserved interaction surface. We propose that these clustered residues impart critical sequence determinants necessary for J-domain catalytic activity and reversible contact interface with the DnaK
ATPase
domain.
...
PMID:Scanning mutagenesis identifies amino acid residues essential for the in vivo activity of the Escherichia coli DnaJ (Hsp40) J-domain. 1245 54
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