Role of the heat shock protein DnaJ in the Lon-dependent degradation of naturally unstable proteins

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Abstract

We have investigated the role of DnaJ in protein degradation by examining the degradation of intrinsically unstable proteins by Lon protease in vivo. In Escherichia coli, Lon protease is responsible for the rate- limiting step in degradation of highly unstable proteins such as SulA, RcsA, and AN protein, as well as for about 50% of the rapid degradation of abnormal proteins such as canavanine-containing proteins. We found that Lon-dependent degradation of both SulA and AN protein was unaffected in cells lacking functional DnaJ, whereas Lon-dependent turnover of canavanine-containing proteins was slower in dnaJ mutant cells. DnaJ also affected the slow SulA degradation seen in the absence of Lon. The rate of degradation of RcsA was reduced in dnaJ mutants, but both Lon-dependent and Lon-independent degradation was affected; abnormal, canavanine-containing proteins were similarly affected. Both the RcsA that accumulated in dnaJ mutant cells and the SulA that accumulated in lon dnaJ mutant cells was aggregated. The abnormal proteins that partitioned to the insoluble pellet became solubilized over time in dnaJ+ cells but not in dnaJ- cells. Therefore, the co- chaperone DnaJ is not essential for Lon-dependent degradation and may act in protein turnover only as an accessory factor helping to maintain substrates in a soluble form. Such an accessory factor is apparently necessary for abnormal proteins and for RcsA. The relative rates of degradation and aggregation of specific protein targets may determine the importance of the chaperone systems in turnover of a given protein.

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Jubete, Y., Maurizi, M. R., & Gottesmanf, S. (1996). Role of the heat shock protein DnaJ in the Lon-dependent degradation of naturally unstable proteins. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 271(48), 30798–30803. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.48.30798

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