2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.mib.2017.03.013
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Selective adaptor dependent protein degradation in bacteria

Abstract: Energy dependent proteolysis is essential for all life, but uncontrolled degradation leads to devastating consequences. In bacteria, oligomeric AAA+ proteases are responsible for controlling protein destruction and are regulated in part by adaptor proteins. Adaptors are regulatory factors that shape protease substrate choice by either restricting or enhancing substrate recognition in several ways. In some cases, protease activity or assembly itself requires adaptor binding. Adaptors can also alter specificity … Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…ATP‐dependent Clp proteases are present in bacteria, as well as mitochondria and plastids (organelles of bacterial origin), where they regulate accumulation levels of a broad range of substrates (Alexopoulos, Guarne, & Ortega, ; Liu, Ologbenla, & Houry, ; Nishimura, Kato, & Sakamoto, ; Nishimura & van Wijk, ; Sauer & Baker, ). The first step in the CLP degradation process requires the recognition of substrates by the CLP AAA+ chaperones, possibly aided by specific adaptors (also named recognins) that recognize and deliver specific substrates (Kuhlmann & Chien, ; Mahmoud & Chien, ). The ATP‐dependent CLP chaperones then dock onto CLP protease core complexes consisting of two stacked heptameric rings, and unfold and direct substrates into the CLP protease complex (Olivares, Baker, & Sauer, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ATP‐dependent Clp proteases are present in bacteria, as well as mitochondria and plastids (organelles of bacterial origin), where they regulate accumulation levels of a broad range of substrates (Alexopoulos, Guarne, & Ortega, ; Liu, Ologbenla, & Houry, ; Nishimura, Kato, & Sakamoto, ; Nishimura & van Wijk, ; Sauer & Baker, ). The first step in the CLP degradation process requires the recognition of substrates by the CLP AAA+ chaperones, possibly aided by specific adaptors (also named recognins) that recognize and deliver specific substrates (Kuhlmann & Chien, ; Mahmoud & Chien, ). The ATP‐dependent CLP chaperones then dock onto CLP protease core complexes consisting of two stacked heptameric rings, and unfold and direct substrates into the CLP protease complex (Olivares, Baker, & Sauer, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ATP-dependent proteases consist of two subunits or domains: one that uses the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to unfold and shuttle substrates into the other subunit or domain where proteolysis actually takes place (1). Degradation of particular substrates of a given protease often requires adaptor proteins to recognize such substrates and deliver them to the unfoldase (2,3). We now report that enteric bacteria achieve differential degradation of substrates of the ATP-dependent protease ClpAP by altering the amounts of the adaptor protein ClpS under specific stress conditions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Without a larger regulatory network, HslV coexists with a set of bacterial self‐compartmentalizing proteases, each with its own proteolytic scope. These proteases rely on specific substrate recognition modes of their associated AAA+ unfoldases, which typically recognize specific peptide sequences or receive substrates via specialized adaptor proteins . Hence, the change in symmetry not only broke with the established interactors but also allowed for the establishment of an independent regulatory layer accompanied by a shift in substrate recognition.…”
Section: Symmetry Transitions Break With Existing Regulatory Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apparently, also this transition led to a decrease in complexity, as BPH does not seem to utilize further regulatory layers that would restrict access to the proteolytic compartment. Consequently, BPH is expected to select target proteins via intrinsic specificity or through adaptor proteins and may have a more specialized substrate spectrum—as for Anbu, the other potentially ungated member of the family. These contemplations point to the necessity to reinvent substrate recognition at each evolutionary branch point.…”
Section: Symmetry Transitions Break With Existing Regulatory Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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