7FIE image
Deposition Date 2021-07-31
Release Date 2021-11-24
Last Version Date 2024-06-12
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
7FIE
Keywords:
Title:
Processive cleavage of substrate at individual proteolytic active sites of the Lon protease complex (conformation 2)
Biological Source:
Host Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
2.36 Å
Aggregation State:
PARTICLE
Reconstruction Method:
SINGLE PARTICLE
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Lon protease
Gene (Uniprot):lonA1
Chain IDs:A (auth: B), B (auth: C), C (auth: D), D (auth: E), E (auth: F), F (auth: A)
Chain Length:806
Number of Molecules:6
Biological Source:Meiothermus taiwanensis
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Unknown endogenous substrate
Chain IDs:G (auth: S)
Chain Length:22
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Meiothermus taiwanensis WR-220
Primary Citation
Processive cleavage of substrate at individual proteolytic active sites of the Lon protease complex.
Sci Adv 7 eabj9537 eabj9537 (2021)
PMID: 34757797 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj9537

Abstact

The Lon protease is the prototype of a family of proteolytic machines with adenosine triphosphatase modules built into a substrate degradation chamber. Lon is known to degrade protein substrates in a processive fashion, cutting a protein chain processively into small peptides before commencing cleavages of another protein chain. Here, we present structural and biochemical evidence demonstrating that processive substrate degradation occurs at each of the six proteolytic active sites of Lon, which forms a deep groove that partially encloses the substrate polypeptide chain by accommodating only the unprimed residues and permits processive cleavage in the C-to-N direction. We identify a universally conserved acidic residue at the exit side of the binding groove indispensable for the proteolytic activity. This noncatalytic residue likely promotes processive proteolysis by carboxyl-carboxylate interactions with cleaved intermediates. Together, these results uncover a previously unrecognized mechanism for processive substrate degradation by the Lon protease.

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Primary Citation of related structures