RAPID DEGRADATION OF AN ABNORMAL PROTEIN IN ESCHERICHIA-COLI INVOLVESTHE CHAPERONES GROEL AND GROES

Citation
O. Kandror et al., RAPID DEGRADATION OF AN ABNORMAL PROTEIN IN ESCHERICHIA-COLI INVOLVESTHE CHAPERONES GROEL AND GROES, The Journal of biological chemistry, 269(38), 1994, pp. 23575-23582
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
00219258
Volume
269
Issue
38
Year of publication
1994
Pages
23575 - 23582
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9258(1994)269:38<23575:RDOAAP>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
In Escherichia coil, the molecular chaperones (DnaK, DnaJ, and GrpE) a re essential for the rapid degradation of certain proteins. To see if chaperones are involved more generally in proteolysis, we studied the degradation of a short-lived fusion protein, CRAG, which associates wi th DnaK and GroEL in vivo. Its rapid degradation requires ATP and ClpP , the proteolytic subunit of protease Ti (Clp). However, this process is not reduced in strains lacking the complementary ATPase subunit, Cl pA, or its homologs, ClpB and CLpX. At 37 degrees C, but not at 42 deg rees C, protease La also contributes partially to CRAG degradation. Ne vertheless, CRAG is not degraded in cell-free extracts or upon incubat ion with ClpP or protease La. We tested whether the chaperones associa ted with CRAG might be involved in its degradation. CRAG breakdown was accelerated 2-3 fold in strains with high levels of heat-shock protei ns (hsps), i.e. in those that overproduce the hsp transcription factor (sigma(32)) or carry a dnaK deletion. A similar stimulation of proteo lysis was observed in cells overproducing GroEL or both GroEL and GroE S; in these cells, more CRAG was associated with GroEL than in the wil d type. In a temperature-sensitive groEL44 mutant at the nonpermissive temperature, CRAG breakdown was accelerated, and more CRAG was found complexed with GroEL. However, in a temperature-sensitive groES mutant , CRAG was completely stable at the nonpermissive temperature and accu mulated bound to GroEL. These findings indicate that the association o f CRAG with GroEL is a rate-limiting step in CRAG degradation, which a lso requires a subsequent action of GroES. We propose that if the hsp6 0/ hsp10 chaperonins fail to catalyze the proper folding of a protein, they can facilitate its rapid degradation.