Single-molecule denaturation and degradation of proteins by the AAA+ ClpXP protease

  1. Yongdae Shina,1,
  2. Joseph H. Davisb,1,
  3. Ricardo R. Brauc,1,2,
  4. Andreas Martinb,1,3,
  5. Jon A. Kennistonb,4,
  6. Tania A. Bakerb,d,
  7. Robert T. Sauerb,5 and
  8. Matthew J. Langa,c,5
  1. Departments of aMechanical Engineering,
  2. bBiology, and
  3. cBiological Engineering and
  4. dHoward Hughes Medical Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139
  • 2Present address: L.E.K. Consulting, Boston, MA 02109.

  • 3Present address: Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.

  • 4Present address: Departments of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.

  1. Contributed by Robert T. Sauer, September 23, 2009

  2. 1Y.S., J.H.D., R.R.B., and A.M. contributed equally to this work. (received for review July 14, 2009)

Abstract

ClpXP is an ATP-fueled molecular machine that unfolds and degrades target proteins. ClpX, an AAA+ enzyme, recognizes specific proteins, and then uses cycles of ATP hydrolysis to denature any native structure and to translocate the unfolded polypeptide into ClpP for degradation. Here, we develop and apply single-molecule fluorescence assays to probe the kinetics of protein denaturation and degradation by ClpXP. These assays employ a single-chain variant of the ClpX hexamer, linked via a single biotin to a streptavidin-coated surface, and fusion substrates with an N-terminal fluorophore and a C-terminal GFP-titin-ssrA module. In the presence of adenosine 5′-[γ-thio]triphosphate (ATPγS), ClpXP degrades the titin-ssrA portion of these substrates but stalls when it encounters GFP. Exchange into ATP then allows synchronous resumption of denaturation and degradation of GFP and any downstream domains. GFP unfolding can be monitored directly, because intrinsic fluorescence is quenched by denaturation. The time required for complete degradation coincides with loss of the substrate fluorophore from the protease complex. Fitting single-molecule data for a set of related substrates provides time constants for ClpX unfolding, translocation, and a terminal step that may involve product release. Comparison of these single-molecule results with kinetics measured in bulk solution indicates similar levels of microscopic and macroscopic ClpXP activity. These results support a stochastic engagement/unfolding mechanism that ultimately results in highly processive degradation and set the stage for more detailed single-molecule studies of machine function.

Footnotes

  • 5To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: mjlang{at}mit.edu or bobsauer{at}mit.edu
  • Author contributions: Y.S., J.H.D., R.R.B., A.M., J.A.K., T.A.B., R.T.S., and M.J.L. designed research; Y.S., J.H.D., R.R.B., A.M., and J.A.K. performed research; Y.S., J.H.D., R.R.B., and A.M. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; Y.S., J.H.D., R.R.B., A.M., J.A.K., T.A.B., R.T.S., and M.J.L. analyzed data; and Y.S., J.H.D., J.A.K., R.T.S., and M.J.L. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0910484106/DCSupplemental.

  • * For this substrate, a 9-s interval between images was used, and the photobleaching time constant was 1,330 s.

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