Crystal structure of Lon protease: Molecular architecture of gated entry to a sequestered degradation chamber

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Abstract

Lon proteases are distributed in all kingdoms of life and are required for survival of cells under stress. Lon is a tandem fusion of an AAA+ molecular chaperone and a protease with a serine-lysine catalytic dyad. We report the 2.0-Å resolution crystal structure of Thermococcus onnurineus NA1 Lon (TonLon). The structure is a three-tiered hexagonal cylinder with a large sequestered chamber accessible through an axial channel. Conserved loops extending from the AAA+ domain combine with an insertion domain containing the membrane anchor to form an apical domain that serves as a gate governing substrate access to an internal unfolding and degradation chamber. Alternating AAA+ domains are in tight- and weak-binding nucleotide states with different domain orientations and intersubunit contacts, reflecting intramolecular dynamics during ATP-driven protein unfolding and translocation. The bowl-shaped proteolytic chamber is contiguous with the chaperone chamber allowing internalized proteins direct access to the proteolytic sites without further gating restrictions. © 2010 European Molecular Biology Organization. All Rights Reserved.

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Cha, S. S., An, Y. J., Lee, C. R., Lee, H. S., Kim, Y. G., Kim, S. J., … Kang, S. G. (2010). Crystal structure of Lon protease: Molecular architecture of gated entry to a sequestered degradation chamber. EMBO Journal, 29(20), 3520–3530. https://doi.org/10.1038/emboj.2010.226

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