Abstract
The Lon protease is a highly conserved protein degradation machine that has critical regulatory and protein quality control functions in cells from the three domains of life. Here, we report the discovery of a α-proteobacterial heat shock protein, LarA, that functions as a dedicated Lon regulator. We show that LarA accumulates at the onset of proteotoxic stress and allosterically activates Lon-catalysed degradation of a large group of substrates through a five amino acid sequence at its C-terminus. Further, we find that high levels of LarA cause growth inhibition in a Lon-dependent manner and that Lon-mediated degradation of LarA itself ensures low LarA levels in the absence of stress. We suggest that the temporal LarA-dependent activation of Lon helps to meet an increased proteolysis demand in response to protein unfolding stress. Our study defines a regulatory interaction of a conserved protease with a heat shock protein, serving as a paradigm of how protease activity can be tuned under changing environmental conditions.
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CITATION STYLE
Omnus, D. J., Fink, M. J., Kallazhi, A., Xandri Zaragoza, M., Leppert, A., Landreh, M., & Jonas, K. (2023). The heat shock protein LarA activates the Lon protease in response to proteotoxic stress. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43385-x
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