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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The induction of Bacillus subtilis genes controlled by the extracytoplasmic function alternative sigma factor sigmaW is strongly impaired in a strain deleted for the
ClpP
peptidase gene and in a double knockout of the ClpX and ClpE ATPase genes. Truncated soluble forms of the sigmaW anti-sigma factor RsiW are stabilized in a clpP minus strain as revealed by the green fluorescent reporter protein fused to the N-terminus of RsiW and by pulse-chase experiments. Conserved alanine residues are present in the transmembrane region of RsiW, and mutations in these positions abolish induction of sigmaW-controlled genes. Following alkaline shock, a truncated cytoplasmic form of RsiW is detectable in a strain expressing a triple alanine mutant allele of rsiW. These data point to a mechanism where the trans-membrane segment of RsiW contains a cryptic proteolytic tag that is uncovered as a result of intramembrane proteolysis of RsiW by RasP (YluC). After RasP-clipped RsiW is detached from the membrane, this proteolytic tag becomes crucial for the complete degradation of RsiW by cytoplasmic proteases and the release of sigmaW. ClpXP plays a major role in this third proteolytic step of stress-induced degradation of RsiW. Overexpression of SsrA-tagged green fluorescent protein as a ClpXP substrate protein reduces alkali induction of a sigmaW-controlled gene by a factor of about three, indicating that a titration mechanism is able to tune the sigmaW-mediated stress response to the cellular state.
Mol
Microbiol 2006 Sep
PMID:Involvement of Clp protease activity in modulating the Bacillus subtilissigmaw stress response. 1689 79
Chlamydia pneumoniae is an important human respiratory pathogen that is responsible for an estimated 10% of community-acquired pneumonia and 5% of bronchitis and sinusitis cases. We examined changes in global protein expression profiles associated with the redifferentiation of reticulate body (RB) to elementary body (EB) as C. pneumoniae cells progressed from 24 to 48 h postinfection in HEp2 cells. Proteins corresponding to those showing the greatest changes in abundance in the beginning of the RB to EB transition were then identified from purified EBs. Among the 300 spots recognized, 35 proteins that were expressed at sufficiently high levels were identified by mass spectrometry. We identified C. pneumoniae proteins that showed more than 2-fold increases in abundance in the early stages of RB to EB transition, including several associated with amino acid and cofactor biosynthesis (Ndk, TrxA, Adk, PyrH, and BirA), maintenance of cytoplasmic protein function (GroEL/ES, DnaK, DksA, GrpE, HtrA,
ClpP
, ClpB, and Map), modification of the bacterial cell surface (CrpA, OmpA, and OmcB), energy metabolism (Tal and Pyk), and the putative transcriptional regulator TctD. This study identified C. pneumoniae proteins involved in the process of redifferentiation into mature, infective EBs and indicates bacterial metabolic pathways that may be involved in this transition. The proteins involved in RB to EB transition are key to C. pneumoniae infection and are perhaps suitable targets for therapeutic intervention.
Mol
Cell Proteomics 2006 Dec
PMID:Identification of Chlamydia pneumoniae proteins in the transition from reticulate to elementary body formation. 1692 Nov 67
The
ATP-dependent Clp protease
has been well-characterized in Escherichia coli, but knowledge of its function in higher plants is limited. In bacteria, this two-component protease consists of a Ser-type endopeptidase
ClpP
, which relies on the ATP-dependent unfolding activity from an Hsp100 molecular chaperone to initiate protein degradation. In the chloroplasts of higher plants, multiple isoforms of the proteolytic subunit exist, with Arabidopsis having five ClpPs and four
ClpP
-like proteins termed ClpR predicted in its genome. In this work we characterized an Arabidopsis mutant impaired in one subunit of the chloroplast-localized
Clp protease
core, ClpR1. clpR1-1, a virescent mutant, carries a pre-mature stop codon in the clpR1 gene, resulting in no detectable ClpR1 protein. The accumulation of several chloroplast proteins, as well as most of the chloroplast-localized
Clp protease
subunits, is inhibited in clpR1-1. Unexpectedly, some plastid-encoded proteins do not accumulate, although their transcripts accumulate to wild-type levels. Maturation of 23S and 4.5S chloroplast ribosomal RNA (cp-rRNA) is delayed in clpR1-1, and both RNAs accumulate as higher molecular weight precursors. Also, chloroplasts in clpR1-1 are smaller than in wild type and have fewer thylakoid membranes with smaller grana stacks. We propose that a ClpR1-containing activity is required for chloroplast development and differentiation and in its absence both are delayed.
Plant
Mol
Biol 2007 Jan
PMID:An Arabidopsis thaliana virescent mutant reveals a role for ClpR1 in plastid development. 1700 84
Clp proteolytic complexes consisting of a proteolytic core flanked by Clp ATPases are widely conserved in bacteria, and their biological roles have received considerable interest. In particular, mutants in the clp genes in the low-GC-content Gram-positive phyla Bacillales and Lactobacillales display a diverse range of phenotypic changes including general stress sensitivity, aberrant cell morphology, failure to initiate developmental programs, and for pathogens, severely attenuated virulence. Extensive research dedicated to unravelling the molecular mechanisms underlying these complex phenotypes has led to fascinating new insights that will be covered by this review. First, Clp ATPases and
ClpP
-containing proteolytic complexes play indispensable roles in cellular protein quality control systems by refolding or degrading damaged proteins in both stressed and non-stressed cells. Secondly,
ClpP
proteases and the chaperone activity of Clp ATPases are important for controlling stability and activity of central transcriptional regulators, thereby exerting tremendous impact on cell physiology. Targets include major stress regulators like Spx (oxidative stress), the antisigma factor RsiW (alkaline stress) and HdiR (DNA damage) in addition to regulators of developmental programs like ComK (competence development), sigmaH and Sda (sporulation). Thus, Clp proteins are central in co-ordinating developmental decisions and stress response in low GC Gram-positive bacteria.
Mol
Microbiol 2007 Mar
PMID:Clp ATPases and ClpP proteolytic complexes regulate vital biological processes in low GC, Gram-positive bacteria. 1730 11
Bacteriophage lambda genome is one of the classical model replicons in studies on the regulation of DNA replication. Moreover, since genes coding for Shiga toxins are located in genomes of lambdoid phages, understanding of mechanisms controlling lambda DNA replication may be of bio-medical importance. During lytic development of bacteriophage lambda, its genome is replicated according to the theta (circle-to-circle) mode early after infection, and then it is switched to the sigma (rolling circle) mode. Two mechanisms of regulation of this switch were proposed recently and both suggested a crucial role for directionality of lambda DNA replication. Whereas one hypothesis assumed transient impairment of
ClpP
/ClpX-mediated proteolysis of the lambdaO initiator protein, another suggested a crucial role for transcriptional activation of the orilambda region and factors involved in the control of the p (R) promoter activity. Here we demonstrate that mutations in clpP and clpX genes had little influence on both directionality of lambda DNA replication and appearance of sigma replication intermediates. On the other hand, regulators affecting activity of the p (R) promoter (responsible for initiation of transcription, which activates orilambda) directly or indirectly influenced directionality of lambda DNA replication to various extents. Therefore, we conclude that regulation of the efficiency of transcriptional activation of orilambda, rather than transient impairment of the lambdaO proteolysis, is responsible for the control of the switch from theta to sigma replication, and propose a model for this control.
Mol
Genet Genomics 2007 Jul
PMID:Switch from theta to sigma replication of bacteriophage lambda DNA: factors involved in the process and a model for its regulation. 1737 19
Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) is a vital mitochondrial protein promoting transfer of cholesterol into steroid making mitochondria in specialized cells of the adrenal cortex and gonads. Our previous work has demonstrated that StAR is rapidly degraded upon import into the mitochondrial matrix. To identify the protease(s) responsible for this rapid turnover, murine StAR was expressed in wild-type Escherichia coli or in mutant strains lacking one of the four ATP-dependent proteolytic systems, three of which are conserved in mammalian mitochondria-
ClpP
, FtsH, and Lon. StAR was rapidly degraded in wild-type bacteria and stabilized only in lon (-)mutants; in such cells, StAR turnover was fully restored upon coexpression of human mitochondrial Lon. In mammalian cells, the rate of StAR turnover was proportional to the cell content of Lon protease after expression of a Lon-targeted small interfering RNA, or overexpression of the protein. In vitro assays using purified proteins showed that Lon-mediated degradation of StAR was ATP-dependent and blocked by the proteasome inhibitors MG132 (IC(50) = 20 microm) and clasto-lactacystin beta-lactone (cLbetaL, IC(50) = 3 microm); by contrast, epoxomicin, representing a different class of proteasome inhibitors, had no effect. Such inhibition is consistent with results in cultured rat ovarian granulosa cells demonstrating that degradation of StAR in the mitochondrial matrix is blocked by MG132 and cLbetaL but not by epoxomicin. Both inhibitors also blocked Lon-mediated cleavage of the model substrate fluorescein isothiocyanate-casein. Taken together, our former studies and the present results suggest that Lon is the primary ATP-dependent protease responsible for StAR turnover in mitochondria of steroidogenic cells.
Mol
Endocrinol 2007 Sep
PMID:Turnover of mitochondrial steroidogenic acute regulatory (StAR) protein by Lon protease: the unexpected effect of proteasome inhibitors. 1757 11
In the ClpXP proteolytic machine, ClpX uses the energy of ATP hydrolysis to unfold protein substrates and translocate them through a central pore and into the degradation chamber of
ClpP
. Here, we demonstrate a bipartite system of ClpX-
ClpP
interactions that serves multiple functional roles. High-affinity contacts between six loops near the periphery of the hexameric ClpX ring and a
ClpP
ring establish correct positioning and increase degradation activity but are insensitive to nucleotide state. These static peripheral interactions maintain a stable ClpXP complex, while other parts of this machine change conformation hundreds of times per minute. By contrast, relatively weak axial contacts between loops at the bottom of the ClpX central channel and N-terminal loops of
ClpP
vary dynamically with the nucleotide state of individual ClpX subunits, control ATP-hydrolysis rates, and facilitate efficient protein unfolding. Thus, discrete static and dynamic interactions mediate binding and communication between ClpX and
ClpP
.
Mol
Cell 2007 Jul 06
PMID:Distinct static and dynamic interactions control ATPase-peptidase communication in a AAA+ protease. 1761 89
In bacteria, protein overproduction results in the formation of inclusion bodies, sized protein aggregates showing amyloid-like properties such as seeding-driven formation, amyloid-tropic dye binding, intermolecular beta-sheet architecture and cytotoxicity on mammalian cells. During protein deposition, exposed hydrophobic patches force intermolecular clustering and aggregation but these aggregation determinants coexist with properly folded stretches, exhibiting native-like secondary structure. Several reports indicate that inclusion bodies formed by different enzymes or fluorescent proteins show detectable biological activity. By using an engineered green fluorescent protein as reporter we have examined how the cell quality control distributes such active but misfolded protein species between the soluble and insoluble cell fractions and how aggregation determinants act in cells deficient in quality control functions. Most of the tested genetic deficiencies in different cytosolic chaperones and proteases (affecting DnaK, GroEL, GroES, ClpB,
ClpP
and Lon at different extents) resulted in much less soluble but unexpectedly more fluorescent polypeptides. The enrichment of aggregates with fluorescent species results from a dramatic inhibition of
ClpP
and Lon-mediated, DnaK-surveyed green fluorescent protein degradation, and it does not perturb the amyloid-like architecture of inclusion bodies. Therefore, the Escherichia coli quality control system promotes protein solubility instead of conformational quality through an overcommitted proteolysis of aggregation-prone polypeptides, irrespective of their global conformational status and biological properties.
J
Mol
Biol 2007 Nov 16
PMID:Divergent genetic control of protein solubility and conformational quality in Escherichia coli. 1792 Jun 30
Signal peptide peptidase (Spp) is the enzyme responsible for cleaving the remnant signal peptides left behind in the membrane following Sec-dependent protein secretion. Spp activity appears to be present in all cell types, eukaryotic, prokaryotic and archaeal. Here we report the first structure of a signal peptide peptidase, that of the Escherichia coli SppA (SppA(EC)). SppA(EC) forms a tetrameric assembly with a novel bowl-shaped architecture. The bowl has a dramatically hydrophobic interior and contains four separate active sites that utilize a Ser/Lys catalytic dyad mechanism. Our structural analysis of SppA reveals that while in many Gram-negative bacteria as well as characterized plant variants, a tandem duplication in the protein fold creates an intact active site at the interface between the repeated domains, other species, particularly Gram-positive and archaeal organisms, encode half-size, unduplicated SppA variants that could form similar oligomers to their duplicated counterparts, but using an octamer arrangement and with the catalytic residues provided by neighboring monomers. The structure reveals a similarity in the protein fold between the domains in the periplasmic Ser/Lys protease SppA and the monomers seen in the cytoplasmic Ser/His/Asp protease
ClpP
. We propose that SppA may, in addition to its role in signal peptide hydrolysis, have a role in the quality assurance of periplasmic and membrane-bound proteins, similar to the role that
ClpP
plays for cytoplasmic proteins.
J
Mol
Biol 2008 Feb 15
PMID:Crystal structure of a bacterial signal Peptide peptidase. 1816 27
In the AAA+ ClpXP protease, repetitive cycles of ATP hydrolysis by ClpX unfold ssrA-tagged substrates, which are unraveled vectorially starting at the C-terminal tag and translocated into
ClpP
for degradation. When the ATP-hydrolysis rate drops below a critical threshold, ClpXP fails to degrade ssrA-tagged green fluorescent protein (GFP) but degrades other tagged proteins, including some that are more stable. Our results support a model in which ClpX unfolding of GFP progresses via a metastable short-lived intermediate, which must be captured by several fast ATP-dependent translocation steps to prevent the protein from refolding and therefore escaping degradation. Thus, AAA+ proteases may be more or less suited to degradation of specific substrates depending on their ability to disrupt native structure and to trap partially unfolded intermediates successfully. We propose that cellular conditions or adaptors that alter ATP-hydrolysis rates could control this trapping activity of AAA+ enzymes.
Nat Struct
Mol
Biol 2008 Feb
PMID:Protein unfolding by a AAA+ protease is dependent on ATP-hydrolysis rates and substrate energy landscapes. 1822 58
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