Publication | Open Access
Effect of directional pulling on mechanical protein degradation by ATP-dependent proteolytic machines
56
Citations
28
References
2017
Year
AAA+ proteases and remodeling machines couple hydrolysis of ATP to mechanical unfolding and translocation of proteins following recognition of sequence tags called degrons. Here, we use single-molecule optical trapping to determine the mechanochemistry of two AAA+ proteases, <i>Escherichia coli</i> ClpXP and ClpAP, as they unfold and translocate substrates containing multiple copies of the titin<sup>I27</sup> domain during degradation initiated from the N terminus. Previous studies characterized degradation of related substrates with C-terminal degrons. We find that ClpXP and ClpAP unfold the wild-type titin<sup>I27</sup> domain and a destabilized variant far more rapidly when pulling from the N terminus, whereas translocation speed is reduced only modestly in the N-to-C direction. These measurements establish the role of directionality in mechanical protein degradation, show that degron placement can change whether unfolding or translocation is rate limiting, and establish that one or a few power strokes are sufficient to unfold some protein domains.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1