The ClpXP and ClpAP proteases degrade proteins with carboxy-terminal peptide tails added by the SsrA-tagging system

  1. Susan Gottesman,
  2. Eric Roche,
  3. YanNing Zhou, and
  4. Robert T. Sauer
  1. Laboratory of Molecular Biology, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892 USA; Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Masaschusetts 02139 USA

Abstract

Interruption of translation in Escherichia coli can lead to the addition of an 11-residue carboxy-terminal peptide tail to the nascent chain. This modification is mediated by SsrA RNA (also called 10Sa RNA and tmRNA) and marks the tagged polypeptide for proteolysis. Degradation in vivo of λ repressor amino-terminal domain variants bearing this carboxy-terminal SsrA peptide tag is shown here to depend on the cytoplasmic proteases ClpXP and ClpAP. Degradation in vitro of SsrA-tagged substrates was reproduced with purified components and required a substrate with a wild-type SsrA tail, the presence of both ClpP and either ClpA or ClpX, and ATP. Clp-dependent proteolysis accounts for most degradation of SsrA-tagged amino-domain substrates at 32°C, but additional proteases contribute to the degradation of some of these SsrA-tagged substrates at 39°C. The existence of multiple cytoplasmic proteases that function in SsrA quality-control surveillance suggests that the SsrA tag is designed to serve as a relatively promiscuous signal for proteolysis. Having diverse degradation systems able to recognize this tag may increase degradation capacity, permit degradation of a wide variety of different tagged proteins, or allow SsrA-tagged proteins to be degraded under different growth conditions.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL susang{at}helix.nih.gov; FAX (301) 496-3875.

    • Received January 13, 1998.
    • Accepted March 2, 1998.
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