Abstract

AAA+ ATPases constitute a large family of proteins that are involved in a plethora of cellular processes including DNA disassembly, protein degradation and protein complex disassembly. They typically form a hexametric ring-shaped structure with six subunits in a (pseudo) 6-fold symmetry. In a subset of AAA+ ATPases that facilitate protein unfolding and degradation, six subunits cooperate to translocate protein substrates through a central pore in the ring. The number and type of nucleotides in an AAA+ ATPase hexamer is inherently linked to the mechanism that underlies cooperation among subunits and couples ATP hydrolysis with substrate translocation. We conducted a native MS study of a monodispersed form of PAN, an archaeal proteasome AAA+ ATPase, to determine the number of nucleotides bound to each hexamer of the WT protein. We utilized ADP and its analogs (TNP-ADP and mant-ADP), and a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog (AMP-PNP) to study nucleotide site occupancy within the PAN hexamer in ADP- and ATP-binding states, respectively. Throughout all experiments we used a Walker A mutant (PANK217A) that is impaired in nucleotide binding as an internal standard to mitigate the effects of residual solvation on mass measurement accuracy and to serve as a reference protein to control for nonspecific nucleotide binding. This approach led to the unambiguous finding that a WT PAN hexamer carried - from expression host - six tightly bound ADP molecules that could be exchanged for ADP and ATP analogs. Although the Walker A mutant did not bind ADP analogs, it did bind AMP-PNP, albeit at multiple stoichiometries. We observed variable levels of hexamer dissociation and an appearance of multimeric species with the over-charged molecular ion distributions across repeated experiments. We posit that these phenomena originated during ESI process at the final stages of ESI droplet evolution.

Highlights

  • AAA1 ATPases constitute a large family of proteins that are involved in a plethora of cellular processes including DNA disassembly, protein degradation and protein complex disassembly

  • Integrity of proteasome-activating nucleotidase (PAN) Protein Preparations—PAN protein preparations to be used for native mass spectrometry (MS) studies were first examined by SDS-PAGE, reversed phase (RP) liquid chromatography (LC) nanoESI MS, UV absorbance profiling and cryo-electron microscopy (EM)

  • The nanoESI MS analysis demonstrated that PAN proteins were faithfully expressed, were not truncated, carried no post-translational modifications, and samples contained no electrospray ionization (ESI)-detectable contaminating proteins, except for a single preparation used for the 2'-(or-3')-O-(trinitrophenyl) adenosine 5'-diphosphate (TNP-ADP) exchange experiment, which contained an unknown impurity of Mr ;69 k presenting with molecular ion envelope within 4k m/ z range, annotated in a supplemental Table S3A

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Summary

Introduction

AAA1 ATPases constitute a large family of proteins that are involved in a plethora of cellular processes including DNA disassembly, protein degradation and protein complex disassembly. Throughout all experiments we used a Walker A mutant (PANK217A) that is impaired in nucleotide binding as an internal standard to mitigate the effects of residual solvation on mass measurement accuracy and to serve as a reference protein to control for nonspecific nucleotide binding This approach led to the unambiguous finding that a WT PAN hexamer carried – from expression host – six tightly bound ADP molecules that could be exchanged for ADP and ATP analogs. AAA1 ATPases constitute a large superfamily of chaperone-like proteins that are involved in many cellular processes, including DNA disassembly, protein degradation and protein complex disassembly [1,2,3,4] They assemble into hexameric structures and combine with other proteins to form molecular machines of highly versatile functions, all powered by the energy released in the process of the AAA1 ATPase-assisted nucleotide triphosphate – typically ATP – hydrolysis. The N ring facilitates substrate unfolding whereas the AAA ring is believed to actively translocate substrates into the CP in an ATP-dependent manner

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