Abstract

Protein disaggregation in Escherichia coli is carried out by ClpB, an AAA(+) (ATPases associated with various cellular activities) molecular chaperone, together with the DnaK chaperone system. Conformational changes in ClpB driven by ATP binding and hydrolysis promote substrate binding, unfolding, and translocation. Conserved pore tyrosines in both nucleotide-binding domain-1 (NBD-1) and -2 (NBD-2), which reside in flexible loops extending into the central pore of the ClpB hexamer, bind substrates. When the NBD-1 pore loop tyrosine is substituted with alanine (Y251A), ClpB can collaborate with the DnaK system in disaggregation, although activity is reduced. The N-domain has also been implicated in substrate binding, and like the NBD-1 pore loop tyrosine, it is not essential for disaggregation activity. To further probe the function and interplay of the ClpB N-domain and the NBD-1 pore loop, we made a double mutant with an N-domain deletion and a Y251A substitution. This ClpB double mutant is inactive in substrate disaggregation with the DnaK system, although each single mutant alone can function with DnaK. Our data suggest that this loss in activity is primarily due to a decrease in substrate engagement by ClpB prior to substrate unfolding and translocation and indicate an overlapping function for the N-domain and NBD-1 pore tyrosine. Furthermore, the functional overlap seen in the presence of the DnaK system is not observed in the absence of DnaK. For innate ClpB unfolding activity, the NBD-1 pore tyrosine is required, and the presence of the N-domain is insufficient to overcome the defect of the ClpB Y251A mutant.

Highlights

  • The ClpB chaperone disaggregates aggregated proteins with the DnaK chaperone

  • When the nucleotide-binding domain-1 (NBD-1) pore loop tyrosine is substituted with alanine (Y251A), ClpB can collaborate with the DnaK system in disaggregation, activity is reduced

  • The results indicate that the NBD-1 pore loop tyrosine and the N-domain have an overlapping role in substrate engagement by ClpB, the action of Tyr-251 is absolutely required for innate ClpB activity

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Summary

Background

The ClpB chaperone disaggregates aggregated proteins with the DnaK chaperone. Results: A ClpB mutant with an N-domain deletion and an NBD-1 pore loop tyrosine substitution lacks disaggregation activity, the single mutants are active. NBD-1 and -2 contain motifs characteristic of nucleotide-binding domains, including Walker A and B, sensor-1 and -2 motifs, and an arginine finger (9 –11) Both nucleotide-binding domains contain a highly conserved tyrosine [9, 11, 12] that extends into the central pore of the ClpB hexamer, they are not visible in the crystal structure due to the flexibility of the loops (Fig. 1, A–C) [8]. These pore tyrosines interact directly with substrates [12, 13]. We examined the effects of substitutions to the NBD-1 and -2 pore tyrosines on protein remodeling in both the presence and absence of the DnaK system

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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