Abstract

ATP-dependent proteases translocate and unfold their substrates. A human virus sequence with only Gly and Ala residues causes similar dysfunctions of eukaryotic and prokaryotic protease motors: unfolding failure. Sequences with amino acids of simple shape and small size impair unfolding of contiguous stable domains. Compartmented ATP-dependent proteases of diverse origin share conserved principles of interaction between translocase/effector and substrate/recipient. ATP-dependent proteases engage, translocate, and unfold substrate proteins. A sequence with only Gly and Ala residues (glycine-alanine repeat; GAr) encoded by the Epstein-Barr virus of humans inhibits eukaryotic proteasome activity. It causes the ATPase translocase to slip on its protein track, stalling unfolding and interrupting degradation. The bacterial protease ClpXP is structurally simpler than the proteasome but has related elements: a regulatory ATPase complex (ClpX) and associated proteolytic chamber (ClpP). In this study, GAr sequences were found to impair ClpXP function much as in proteasomes. Stalling depended on interaction between a GAr and a suitably spaced and positioned folded domain resistant to mechanical unfolding. Persistent unfolding failure results in the interruption of degradation and the production of partial degradation products that include the resistant domain. The capacity of various sequences to cause unfolding failure was investigated. Among those tested, a GAr was most effective, implying that viral selection had optimized processivity failure. More generally, amino acids of simple shape and small size promoted unfolding failure. The ClpX ATPase is a homohexamer. Partial degradation products could exit the complex through transient gaps between the ClpX monomers or, alternatively, by backing out. Production of intermediates by diverse topological forms of the hexamer was shown to be similar, excluding lateral escape. In principle, a GAr could interrupt degradation because 1) the translocase thrusts forward less effectively or because 2) the translocase retains substrate less well when resetting between forward strokes. Kinetic analysis showed that the predominant effect was through the second of these mechanisms.

Highlights

  • ATP-dependent proteases translocate and unfold their substrates

  • In a substrate with a Gly-Ala repeat (GAr) and folded domain positioned so that the GAr arrives at the ClpX translocase at the same time that a trailing folded domain arrives at a site of constriction where its unfolding takes place, failure to unfold depends on both the structural stability of the folded domain and the ability of the GAr to impede translocation, which drives unfolding

  • ATP-dependent proteases convert the chemical energy of ATP binding and hydrolysis to mechanical work, which moves substrates and concomitantly unfolds them

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Summary

Background

ATP-dependent proteases translocate and unfold their substrates. Results: A human virus sequence with only Gly and Ala residues causes similar dysfunctions of eukaryotic and prokaryotic protease motors: unfolding failure. Substrates That Impair Translocation by Protease ATPase strates that contain folded domains Degrading these can require multiple rounds of ATP hydrolysis, each with a low probability of unfolding success. Using a series of substrates of systematically varied composition, the requirements for productive interaction with the ClpXP translocase were tested Despite their great differences of taxonomy and structural complexity, proteasomes and ClpXP displayed similar enhancements of intermediate generation in response to folded substrates and a GAr. Despite their great differences of taxonomy and structural complexity, proteasomes and ClpXP displayed similar enhancements of intermediate generation in response to folded substrates and a GAr This suggests that highly conserved functional characteristics among such ATPase motors determine alternative outcomes of substrate processing

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