TY - JOUR
T1 - Structural dynamics of the MecA-ClpC complex
T2 - A type II AAA+ protein unfolding machine
AU - Liu, Jing
AU - Mei, Ziqing
AU - Li, Ningning
AU - Qi, Yutao
AU - Xu, Yanji
AU - Shi, Yigong
AU - Wang, Feng
AU - Lei, Jianlin
AU - Gao, Ning
PY - 2013/6/14
Y1 - 2013/6/14
N2 - The MecA-ClpC complex is a bacterial type II AAA+ molecular machine responsible for regulated unfolding of substrates, such as transcription factors ComK and ComS, and targeting them to ClpP for degradation. The six subunits of the MecA-ClpC complex form a closed barrel-like structure, featured with three stacked rings and a hollow passage, where substrates are threaded and translocated through successive pores. Although the general concepts of how polypeptides are unfolded and translocated by internal pore loops of AAA + proteins have long been conceived, the detailed mechanistic model remains elusive. With cryoelectron microscopy, we captured four different structures of the MecA-ClpC complexes. These complexes differ in the nucleotide binding states of the two AAA+ rings and therefore might presumably reflect distinctive, representative snapshots from a dynamic unfolding cycle of this hexameric complex. Structural analysis reveals that nucleotide binding and hydrolysis modulate the hexameric complex in a number of ways, including the opening of the N-terminal ring, the axial and radial positions of pore loops, the compactness of the C-terminal ring, as well as the relative rotation between the two nucleotide-binding domain rings. More importantly, our structural and biochemical data indicate there is an active allosteric communication between the two AAA+ rings and suggest that concerted actions of the two AAA+ rings are required for the efficiency of the substrate unfolding and translocation. These findings provide important mechanistic insights into the dynamic cycle of the MecA-ClpC unfoldase and especially lay a foundation toward the complete understanding of the structural dynamics of the general type II AAA+ hexamers.
AB - The MecA-ClpC complex is a bacterial type II AAA+ molecular machine responsible for regulated unfolding of substrates, such as transcription factors ComK and ComS, and targeting them to ClpP for degradation. The six subunits of the MecA-ClpC complex form a closed barrel-like structure, featured with three stacked rings and a hollow passage, where substrates are threaded and translocated through successive pores. Although the general concepts of how polypeptides are unfolded and translocated by internal pore loops of AAA + proteins have long been conceived, the detailed mechanistic model remains elusive. With cryoelectron microscopy, we captured four different structures of the MecA-ClpC complexes. These complexes differ in the nucleotide binding states of the two AAA+ rings and therefore might presumably reflect distinctive, representative snapshots from a dynamic unfolding cycle of this hexameric complex. Structural analysis reveals that nucleotide binding and hydrolysis modulate the hexameric complex in a number of ways, including the opening of the N-terminal ring, the axial and radial positions of pore loops, the compactness of the C-terminal ring, as well as the relative rotation between the two nucleotide-binding domain rings. More importantly, our structural and biochemical data indicate there is an active allosteric communication between the two AAA+ rings and suggest that concerted actions of the two AAA+ rings are required for the efficiency of the substrate unfolding and translocation. These findings provide important mechanistic insights into the dynamic cycle of the MecA-ClpC unfoldase and especially lay a foundation toward the complete understanding of the structural dynamics of the general type II AAA+ hexamers.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84879061703&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M113.458752
DO - 10.1074/jbc.M113.458752
M3 - Article
C2 - 23595989
AN - SCOPUS:84879061703
SN - 0021-9258
VL - 288
SP - 17597
EP - 17608
JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry
JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry
IS - 24
ER -