Abstract

ATP-dependent proteases are responsible for most energy-dependent protein degradation across all species. Proteases initially bind an unstructured region on a substrate and then translocate along the polypeptide chain, unfolding and degrading protein domains as they are encountered. Although this process is normally processive, resulting in the complete degradation of substrate proteins to small peptides, some substrates are released prematurely. Regions of low sequence complexity within the substrate such as the glycine-rich region (GRR) from p105 or glycine-alanine repeats (GAr) from the EBNA1 (Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen-1) protein, can trigger partial degradation and fragment release. Loss of processivity could be due to inability to hold on to the substrate (faster release) or inability to unfold and degrade a substrate domain (slower unfolding). I previously showed that the GRR slows domain unfolding by the proteasome (Kraut, D. A., Israeli, E., Schrader, E. K., Patil, A., Nakai, K., Nanavati, D., Inobe, T., and Matouschek, A. (2012) ACS Chem. Biol. 7, 1444-1453). In contrast, a recently published study concluded that GArs increase the rate of substrate release from ClpXP, a bacterial ATP-dependent protease (Too, P. H., Erales, J., Simen, J. D., Marjanovic, A., and Coffino, P. (2013) J. Biol. Chem. 288, 13243-13257). Here, I show that these apparently contradictory results can be reconciled through a reanalysis of the ClpXP GAr data. This reanalysis shows that, as with the proteasome, low complexity sequences in substrates slow their unfolding and degradation by ClpXP, with little effect on release rates. Thus, despite their evolutionary distance and limited sequence identity, both ClpXP and the proteasome share a common mechanism by which substrate sequences regulate the processivity of degradation.

Highlights

  • ATP-dependent proteases cannot fully degrade so-called “slippery” substrates

  • The glycine-rich region (GRR) sequence reduces the processivity of the proteasome in its normal biological context (p105), when combined with proteins such as dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in in vitro degradation assays, and reduces the processivity of bacterial proteases such as ClpXP and ClpAP [3, 6, 14]

  • We investigated the processivity of the proteasome using a substrate consisting of a ubiquitination signal and initiation site, an unfoldable barnase domain and a more difficult to unfold DHFR domain [6]

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Summary

Background

ATP-dependent proteases cannot fully degrade so-called “slippery” substrates. Results: Reanalysis indicates ClpXP has a reduced unfolding rate for slippery substrates, not a faster substrate release rate. The GRR sequence reduces the processivity of the proteasome in its normal biological context (p105), when combined with proteins such as dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in in vitro degradation assays, and reduces the processivity of bacterial proteases such as ClpXP and ClpAP [3, 6, 14] Another low complexity sequence, a Gly-Ala repeat (GAr) in the EBNA1. A low complexity sequence slows forward movement and weakens the ability of the proteasome to unfold and degrade its substrate as normal, but a similar sequence causes ClpXP to release its substrate prematurely It would be exciting if there were fundamental differences in the way bacterial and eukaryotic ATP-dependent proteases deal with slippery substrates, and it would suggest major differences in the degradation machineries. A careful reexamination and reanalysis of the ClpXP GAr data shows that the bacterial and eukaryotic proteases behave in a similar manner, with low complexity sequences principally slowing the unfolding and degradation of substrate proteins

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Ϫ e frag frag k ϩ k deg rel
DISCUSSION

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