Substrate sequestration by a proteolytically inactive Lon mutant
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Contributed by Susan Gottesman
Abstract
Lon protein of Escherichia coli is an ATP-dependent protease responsible for the rapid turnover of both abnormal and naturally unstable proteins, including SulA, a cell division inhibitor made after DNA damage, and RcsA, a positive regulator of transcription. Lon is a multimer of identical 94-kDa subunits, each containing a consensus ATPase motif and a serine active site. We found that overexpressing Lon, which is mutated for the serine active site (LonS679A) and is therefore devoid of proteolytic activity, unexpectedly led to complementation of the UV sensitivity and capsule overproduction of a lon deletion mutant. SulA was not degraded by LonS679A, but rather was completely protected by the Lon mutant from degradation by other cellular proteases. We interpret these results to mean that the mutant LonS679A binds but does not degrade Lon substrates, resulting in sequestration of the substrate proteins and interference with their activities, resulting in apparent complementation. Lon that carried a mutation in the consensus ATPase site, either with or without the active site serine, was no longer able to complement a Δlon mutant. These in vivo results suggest that the pathway of degradation by Lon couples ATP-dependent unfolding with movement of the substrate into protected chambers within Lon, where it is held until degradation proceeds. In the absence of degradation the substrate remains sequestered. Comparison of our results with those from a number of other systems suggest that proteins related to the regulatory portions of energy-dependent proteases act as energy-dependent sequestration proteins.
Footnotes
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↵ † Present address: Laboratoire de Génétique des Prokaryotes, Université Libre de Bruxelles, 67 rue des Chevaux, 1640 Rhode-Saint-Genèse, Belgium.
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↵ ‡ To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Building 37, Room 2E18, 37 Convent Drive, MSC4255, Bethesda, MD 20892-4255. e-mail: susang{at}helix.nih.gov.
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This contribution is part of the special series of Inaugural Articles by members of the National Academy of Sciences elected on April 28, 1998.
- ABBREVIATION:
- TCA,
- trichloroacetic acid
- Copyright © 1999, The National Academy of Sciences





