Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10768560 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The coordinated activities of chaperones and proteases that supervise protein folding and degradation are important factors for deciding the fate of proteins whose folding is impaired by missense variations. We have studied the role of Lon and ClpXP proteases in handling of wild-type and a folding-impaired disease-associated variant (R28C) of the mitochondrial enzyme medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD). Using an Escherichia coli model system, we co-overexpressed the MCAD variants and the respective proteases at two conditions: at 31 °C where R28C MCAD protein folds partially and at 37 °C where it misfolds and aggregates. Co-overexpression of Lon protease considerably accelerated the degradation rate of a pool of R28C variant MCAD synthesised during a 30 min pulse and counteracted accumulation of aggregates at 37 °C, whereas increasing the amounts of ClpXP protease had no clear effect. Co-overexpression of either Lon or ClpXP protease markedly decreased the steady state levels of both wild-type and R28C mutant MCAD at 37 °C but not at 31 °C. Our results suggest that Lon is more efficient than ClpXP in elimination of non-native MCAD protein conformations, and accordingly, that Lon can recognise a broader spectrum of MCAD protein conformations.
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Authors
Jakob Hansen, Niels Gregersen, Peter Bross,