Molecular basis for the unique role of the AAA + chaperone ClpV in type VI protein secretion

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Abstract

Ring-forming AAA + ATPases act in a plethora of cellular processes by remodeling macromolecules. The specificity of individual AAA + proteins is achieved by direct or adaptor-mediated association with substrates via distinct recognition domains. We investigated the molecular basis of substrate interaction for Vibrio cholerae ClpV, which disassembles tubular VipA/VipB complexes, an essential step of type VI protein secretion and bacterial virulence. We identified the ClpV recognition site within VipB, showed that productive ClpV-VipB interaction requires the oligomeric state of both proteins, solved the crystal structure of a ClpV N-domain-VipB peptide complex, and verified the interaction surface by mutant analysis. Our results show that the substrate is bound to a hydrophobic groove, which is formed by the addition of a single α-helix to the core N-domain. This helix is absent from homologous N-domains, explaining the unique substrate specificity of ClpV. A limited interaction surface between both proteins accounts for the dramatic increase in binding affinity upon ATP-driven ClpV hexamerization and VipA/VipB tubule assembly by coupling multiple weak interactions. This principle ensures ClpV selectivity toward the VipA/VipB macromolecular complex. © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Pietrosiuk, A., Lenherr, E. D., Falk, S., Bönemann, G., Kopp, J., Zentgraf, H., … Mogk, A. (2011). Molecular basis for the unique role of the AAA + chaperone ClpV in type VI protein secretion. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 286(34), 30010–30021. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.253377

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