Both ATPase domains of ClpA are critical for processing of stable protein structures

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Abstract

ClpA is a ring-shaped hexameric chaperone that binds to both ends of the protease ClpP and catalyzes the ATP-dependent unfolding and translocation of substrate proteins through its central pore into the ClpP cylinder. Here we study the relevance of ATP hydrolysis in the two ATPase domains of ClpA. We designed ClpA Walker B variants lacking ATPase activity in the first (D1) or the second ATPase domain (D2) without impairing ATP binding. We found that the two ATPase domains of ClpA operate independently even in the presence of the protease ClpP or the adaptor protein ClpS. Notably, ATP hydrolysis in the first ATPase module is sufficient to process a small, single domain protein of low stability. Substrate proteins of moderate local stability were efficiently processed when D1 was inactivated. However, ATP hydrolysis in both domains was required for efficiently processing substrates of high local stability. Furthermore, we provide evidence for the ClpS-dependent directional translocation of N-end rule substrates from theNto C terminus and propose a mechanistic model for substrate handover from the adaptor protein to the chaperone. © 2009 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Kress, W., Mutschler, H., & Weber-Ban, E. (2009). Both ATPase domains of ClpA are critical for processing of stable protein structures. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 284(45), 31441–31452. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.022319

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