clp protease
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2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 465
Author(s):  
Imran T. Malik ◽  
Julian D. Hegemann ◽  
Heike Brötz-Oesterhelt

The Clp protease system fulfills a plethora of important functions in bacteria. It consists of a tetradecameric ClpP barrel holding the proteolytic centers and two hexameric Clp-ATPase rings, which recognize, unfold, and then feed substrate proteins into the ClpP barrel for proteolytic degradation. Flexible loops carrying conserved tripeptide motifs protrude from the Clp-ATPases and bind into hydrophobic pockets (H-pockets) on ClpP. Here, we set out to engineer microcin J25 (MccJ25), a ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide (RiPP) of the lasso peptide subfamily, by introducing the conserved tripeptide motifs into the lasso peptide loop region to mimic the Clp-ATPase loops. We studied the capacity of the resulting lasso peptide variants to bind to ClpP and affect its activity. From the nine variants generated, one in particular (12IGF) was able to activate ClpP from Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus subtilis. While 12IGF conferred stability to ClpP tetradecamers and stimulated peptide degradation, it did not trigger unregulated protein degradation, in contrast to the H-pocket-binding acyldepsipeptide antibiotics (ADEPs). Interestingly, synergistic interactions between 12IGF and ADEP were observed.



Author(s):  
Reaz Uddin ◽  
Kanwal Khan

Background: Various challenges exist in the treatment of infectious diseases due to the significant rise in drug resistance, resulting in the failure of antibiotic treatment. As a consequence, a dire need has arisen for the rethinking of the drug discovery cycle because of the challenge of drug resistance. The underlying cause of the infectious diseases depends upon associations within the Host-pathogen Protein-Protein Interactions (HP-PPIs) network, which represents a key to unlock new pathogenesis mechanism. Hence, the elucidation of significant PPIs is a promising approach for the identification of potential drug targets. Objective: Identification of the most significant HP-PPIs and their partners, and target them to prioritize potential new drug targets against Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VRE). Methods: We applied a computational approach based on one of the emerging techniques i.e. Interolog methodology to predict the significant Host-Pathogen PPIs. Structure-Based Studies were applied to model shortlisted protein structures and validate them through PSIPRED, PROCHECK, VERIFY3D, and ERRAT tools. Furthermore, 18,000 drug-like compounds from the ZINC library were docked against these proteins to study protein-chemical interactions using the AutoDock based molecular docking method. Results: Study resulted in the identification of 118 PPIs for Enterococcus faecalis, and prioritized two novel drug targets i.e. Exodeoxyribonuclease (ExoA) and ATP-dependent Clp protease proteolytic subunit (ClpP). Consequently, the docking program ranked 2,670 and 3,154 compounds as potential binders against Exodeoxyribonuclease and ATP-dependent Clp protease proteolytic subunit, respectively. Conclusion: Thereby, the current study enabled us to identify and prioritize potential PPIs in VRE and their interacting proteins in human hosts along with the pool of novel drug candidates.



2021 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Astrid Illigmann ◽  
Yvonne Thoma ◽  
Stefan Pan ◽  
Laura Reinhardt ◽  
Heike Brötz-Oesterhelt

Fast adaptation to environmental changes ensures bacterial survival, and proteolysis represents a key cellular process in adaptation. The Clp protease system is a multi-component machinery responsible for protein homoeostasis, protein quality control, and targeted proteolysis of transcriptional regulators in prokaryotic cells and prokaryote-derived organelles of eukaryotic cells. A functional Clp protease complex consists of the tetradecameric proteolytic core ClpP and a hexameric ATP-consuming Clp-ATPase, several of which can associate with the same proteolytic core. Clp-ATPases confer substrate specificity by recognising specific degradation tags, and further selectivity is conferred by adaptor proteins, together allowing for a fine-tuned degradation process embedded in elaborate regulatory networks. This review focuses on the contribution of the Clp protease system to prokaryotic survival and summarises the current state of knowledge for exemplary bacteria in an increasing degree of interaction with eukaryotic cells. Starting from free-living bacteria as exemplified by a non-pathogenic and a pathogenic member of the Firmicutes, i.e., <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> and <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i>, respectively, we turn our attention to facultative and obligate intracellular bacterial pathogens, i.e., <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Listeria monocytogenes,</i> and <i>Chlamydia trachomatis</i>, and conclude with mitochondria. Under stress conditions, the Clp protease system exerts its pivotal role in the degradation of damaged proteins and controls the timing and extent of the heat-shock response by regulatory proteolysis. Key regulators of developmental programmes like natural competence, motility, and sporulation are also under Clp proteolytic control. In many pathogenic species, the Clp system is required for the expression of virulence factors and essential for colonising the host. In accordance with its evolutionary origin, the human mitochondrial Clp protease strongly resembles its bacterial counterparts, taking a central role in protein quality control and homoeostasis, energy metabolism, and apoptosis in eukaryotic cells, and several cancer cell types depend on it for proliferation.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ning Wang ◽  
Yifan Wang ◽  
Qian Zhao ◽  
Xiang Zhang ◽  
Chao Peng ◽  
...  

Protein homeostasis in plastids is strategically regulated by the protein quality control system involving multiple chaperones and proteases, among them the Clp protease. We determined the structure of the chloroplast ClpP complex from Chlamydomonas reinhardtiiby cryo-EM. ClpP contains two heptameric catalytic rings without any symmetry. The top ring contains one ClpR6, three ClpP4 and three ClpP5 subunits while the bottom ring is composed of three ClpP1C subunits and one each of the ClpR1-4 subunits. ClpR3, ClpR4 and ClpT4 subunits connect the two rings and stabilize the complex. The chloroplast Cpn11/20/23 co-chaperonin, a co-factor of Cpn60, forms a cap on the top of ClpP by protruding mobile loops into hydrophobic clefts at the surface of the top ring. The co-chaperonin repressed ClpP proteolytic activity in vitro. By regulating Cpn60 chaperone and ClpP protease activity, the co-chaperonin may play a role in coordinating protein folding and degradation in the chloroplast.



Author(s):  
Yuan Ju ◽  
Qi An ◽  
Yiwen Zhang ◽  
Ke Sun ◽  
Lang Bai ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinfeng Li ◽  
Fang Chen ◽  
Xiaoyu Liu ◽  
Jinfeng Xiao ◽  
Binda T. Andongma ◽  
...  

Under starvation conditions, bacteria tend to slow down their translation rate by reducing rRNA synthesis, but the way they accomplish that may vary in different bacteria. In Mycobacterium species, transcription of rRNA is activated by the RNA polymerase (RNAP) accessory transcription factor CarD, which interacts directly with RNAP to stabilize the RNAP-promoter open complex formed on rRNA genes. The functions of CarD have been extensively studied, but the mechanisms that control its expression remain obscure. Here, we report that the level of CarD was tightly regulated when mycobacterial cells switched from nutrient-rich to nutrient-deprived conditions. At the translational level, an antisense RNA of carD (AscarD) was induced in a SigF-dependent manner to bind with carD mRNA and inhibit CarD translation, while at the post-translational level, the Clp protease was activated and quickly degrades the residual CarD. AscarD thus worked synergistically with Clp protease to maintain CarD at the minimal level to help mycobacterial cells cope with the nutritional stress. Altogether, our work elucidates the regulation mode of CarD and delineates a new mechanism for the mycobacterial starvation response, which is important for the adaptation and persistence of mycobacterial pathogens in the host environment.



2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kinia Ameztoy ◽  
Ángela María Sánchez-López ◽  
Francisco José Muñoz ◽  
Abdellatif Bahaji ◽  
Goizeder Almagro ◽  
...  

Microorganisms produce volatile compounds (VCs) with molecular masses of less than 300 Da that promote plant growth and photosynthesis. Recently, we have shown that small VCs of less than 45 Da other than CO2 are major determinants of plant responses to fungal volatile emissions. However, the regulatory mechanisms involved in the plants’ responses to small microbial VCs remain unclear. In Arabidopsis thaliana plants exposed to small fungal VCs, growth promotion is accompanied by reduction of the thiol redox of Calvin-Benson cycle (CBC) enzymes and changes in the levels of shikimate and 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 4-phosphate (MEP) pathway-related compounds. We hypothesized that plants’ responses to small microbial VCs involve post-translational modulation of enzymes of the MEP and shikimate pathways via mechanisms involving redox-activated photosynthesis signaling. To test this hypothesis, we compared the responses of wild-type (WT) plants and a cfbp1 mutant defective in a redox-regulated isoform of the CBC enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase to small VCs emitted by the fungal phytopathogen Alternaria alternata. Fungal VC-promoted growth and photosynthesis, as well as metabolic and proteomic changes, were substantially weaker in cfbp1 plants than in WT plants. In WT plants, but not in cfbp1 plants, small fungal VCs reduced the levels of both transcripts and proteins of the stromal Clp protease system and enhanced those of plastidial chaperonins and co-chaperonins. Consistently, small fungal VCs promoted the accumulation of putative Clp protease clients including MEP and shikimate pathway enzymes. clpr1-2 and clpc1 mutants with disrupted plastidial protein homeostasis responded weakly to small fungal VCs, strongly indicating that plant responses to microbial volatile emissions require a finely regulated plastidial protein quality control system. Our findings provide strong evidence that plant responses to fungal VCs involve chloroplast-to-nucleus retrograde signaling of redox-activated photosynthesis leading to proteostatic regulation of the MEP and shikimate pathways.



mBio ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadine Silber ◽  
Stefan Pan ◽  
Sina Schäkermann ◽  
Christian Mayer ◽  
Heike Brötz-Oesterhelt ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Antibiotic acyldepsipeptides (ADEPs) deregulate ClpP, the proteolytic core of the bacterial Clp protease, thereby inhibiting its native functions and concomitantly activating it for uncontrolled proteolysis of nonnative substrates. Importantly, although ADEP-activated ClpP is assumed to target multiple polypeptide and protein substrates in the bacterial cell, not all proteins seem equally susceptible. In Bacillus subtilis, the cell division protein FtsZ emerged to be particularly sensitive to degradation by ADEP-activated ClpP at low inhibitory ADEP concentrations. In fact, FtsZ is the only bacterial protein that has been confirmed to be degraded in vitro as well as within bacterial cells so far. However, the molecular reason for this preferred degradation remained elusive. Here, we report the unexpected finding that ADEP-activated ClpP alone, in the absence of any Clp-ATPase, leads to an unfolding and subsequent degradation of the N-terminal domain of FtsZ, which can be prevented by the stabilization of the FtsZ fold via nucleotide binding. At elevated antibiotic concentrations, importantly, the C terminus of FtsZ is notably targeted for degradation in addition to the N terminus. Our results show that different target structures are more or less accessible to ClpP, depending on the ADEP level present. Moreover, our data assign a Clp-ATPase-independent protein unfolding capability to the ClpP core of the bacterial Clp protease and suggest that the protein fold of FtsZ may be more flexible than previously anticipated. IMPORTANCE Acyldepsipeptide (ADEP) antibiotics effectively kill multidrug-resistant Gram-positive pathogens, including vancomycin-resistant enterococcus, penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae (PRSP), and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The antibacterial activity of ADEP depends on a new mechanism of action, i.e., the deregulation of bacterial protease ClpP that leads to bacterial self-digestion. Our data allow new insights into the mode of ADEP action by providing a molecular explanation for the distinct bacterial phenotypes observed at low versus high ADEP concentrations. In addition, we show that ClpP alone, in the absence of any unfoldase or energy-consuming system, and only activated by the small molecule antibiotic ADEP, leads to the unfolding of the cell division protein FtsZ.



Plants ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 259
Author(s):  
Md. Sarafat Ali ◽  
Kwang-Hyun Baek

Metabolites in plants are the products of cellular metabolic processes, and their differential amount can be regarded as the final responses of plants to genetic, epigenetic, or environmental stresses. The Clp protease complex, composed of the chaperonic parts and degradation proteases, is the major degradation system for proteins in plastids. ClpC1 and ClpC2 are the two chaperonic proteins for the Clp protease complex and share more than 90% nucleotide and amino acid sequence similarities. In this study, we employed virus-induced gene silencing to simultaneously suppress the expression of ClpC1 and ClpC2 in Nicotiana benthamiana (NbClpC1/C2). The co-suppression of NbClpC1/C2 in N. benthamiana resulted in aberrant development, with severely chlorotic leaves and stunted growth. A comparison of the control and NbClpC1/C2 co-suppressed N. benthamiana metabolomes revealed a total of 152 metabolites identified by capillary electrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The co-suppression of NbClpC1/C2 significantly altered the levels of metabolites in glycolysis, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the pentose phosphate pathway, and the purine biosynthetic pathway, as well as polyamine and antioxidant metabolites. Our results show that the simultaneous suppression of ClpC1 and ClpC2 leads to aberrant morphological changes in chloroplasts and that these changes are related to changes in the contents of major metabolites acting in cellular metabolism and biosynthetic pathways.



2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jyotsna Nagpal ◽  
Jason J. Paxman ◽  
Jessica E. Zammit ◽  
Adnan Alhuwaider ◽  
Kaye N. Truscott ◽  
...  

AbstractThe ClpP protease is found in all kingdoms of life, from bacteria to humans. In general, this protease forms a homo-oligomeric complex composed of 14 identical subunits, which associates with its cognate ATPase in a symmetrical manner. Here we show that, in contrast to this general architecture, the Clp protease from Mycobacterium smegmatis (Msm) forms an asymmetric hetero-oligomeric complex ClpP1P2, which only associates with its cognate ATPase through the ClpP2 ring. Our structural and functional characterisation of this complex demonstrates that asymmetric docking of the ATPase component is controlled by both the composition of the ClpP1 hydrophobic pocket (Hp) and the presence of a unique C-terminal extension in ClpP1 that guards this Hp. Our structural analysis of MsmClpP1 also revealed openings in the side-walls of the inactive tetradecamer, which may represent sites for product egress.



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