An intrinsically disordered motif regulates the interaction between the p47 adaptor and the p97 AAA+ ATPase

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Abstract

VCP/p97, an enzyme critical to proteostasis, is regulated through interactions with protein adaptors targeting it to specific cellular tasks. One such adaptor, p47, forms a complex with p97 to direct lipid membrane remodeling. Here, we use NMR and other biophysical methods to study the structural dynamics of p47 and p47-p97 complexes. Disordered regions in p47 are shown to be critical in directing intra-p47 and p47-p97 interactions via a pair of previously unidentified linear motifs. One of these, an SHP domain, regulates p47 binding to p97 in a manner that depends on the nucleotide state of p97. NMR and electron cryomicroscopy data have been used as restraints in molecular dynamics trajectories to develop structural ensembles for p47-p97 complexes in adenosine diphosphate (ADP)- and adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-bound conformations, highlighting differences in interactions in the two states. Our study establishes the importance of intrinsically disordered regions in p47 for the formation of functional p47-p97 complexes.

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Conicella, A. E., Huang, R., Ripstein, Z. A., Nguyen, A., Wang, E., Löhr, T., … Kay, L. E. (2020). An intrinsically disordered motif regulates the interaction between the p47 adaptor and the p97 AAA+ ATPase. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(42), 26226–26236. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2013920117

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