TY - JOUR
T1 - Crystal structure of the MecA degradation tag
AU - Wang, Feng
AU - Mei, Ziqing
AU - Qi, Yutao
AU - Yan, Chuangye
AU - Xiang, Siheng
AU - Zhou, Zhiyuan
AU - Hu, Qi
AU - Wang, Jiawei
AU - Shi, Yigong
PY - 2009/12/4
Y1 - 2009/12/4
N2 - MecA is an adaptor protein that regulates the assembly and activity of the ATP-dependent ClpCP protease in Bacillus subtilis. MecAcontains two domains. Although the amino-terminal domain of MecA recruits substrate proteins such as ComK and ComS, the carboxyl-terminal domain (residues 121-218) has dual roles in the regulation and function of ClpCP protease. MecA-(121-218) facilitates the assembly of ClpCP oligomer, which is required for the protease activity of ClpCP. This domain was identified to be a non-recycling degradation tag that targets heterologous fusion proteins to the ClpCP protease for degradation. To elucidate the mechanism of MecA, we determined the crystal structure of MecA-(121-218) at 2.2Å resolution, which reveals a previously uncharacterized α/β fold. Structure-guided mutagenesis allows identification of surface residues that are essential for the function of MecA. We also solved the structure of a carboxyl-terminal domain of YpbH, a paralogue of MecA in B. subtilis, at 2.4Å resolution. Despite low sequence identity, the two structures share essentially the same fold. The presence of MecA homologues in other bacterial species suggests conservation of a large family of unique degradation tags.
AB - MecA is an adaptor protein that regulates the assembly and activity of the ATP-dependent ClpCP protease in Bacillus subtilis. MecAcontains two domains. Although the amino-terminal domain of MecA recruits substrate proteins such as ComK and ComS, the carboxyl-terminal domain (residues 121-218) has dual roles in the regulation and function of ClpCP protease. MecA-(121-218) facilitates the assembly of ClpCP oligomer, which is required for the protease activity of ClpCP. This domain was identified to be a non-recycling degradation tag that targets heterologous fusion proteins to the ClpCP protease for degradation. To elucidate the mechanism of MecA, we determined the crystal structure of MecA-(121-218) at 2.2Å resolution, which reveals a previously uncharacterized α/β fold. Structure-guided mutagenesis allows identification of surface residues that are essential for the function of MecA. We also solved the structure of a carboxyl-terminal domain of YpbH, a paralogue of MecA in B. subtilis, at 2.4Å resolution. Despite low sequence identity, the two structures share essentially the same fold. The presence of MecA homologues in other bacterial species suggests conservation of a large family of unique degradation tags.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=71749083420&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M109.053033
DO - 10.1074/jbc.M109.053033
M3 - Article
C2 - 19801546
AN - SCOPUS:71749083420
SN - 0021-9258
VL - 284
SP - 34376
EP - 34381
JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry
JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry
IS - 49
ER -