posted on 2015-11-25, 00:00authored byMalte Gersch, Matthias Stahl, Marcin Poreba, Maria Dahmen, Anna Dziedzic, Marcin Drag, Stephan A. Sieber
ClpP
is a self-compartmentalizing protease with crucial roles in
bacterial and mitochondrial protein quality control. Although the
ClpP homocomplex is composed of 14 equivalent active sites, it degrades
a multitude of substrates to small peptides, demonstrating its capability
to carry out diverse cleavage reactions. Here, we show that ClpP proteases
from E. coli, S. aureus, and human
mitochondria exhibit preferences for certain amino acids in the P1,
P2, and P3 positions using a tailored fluorogenic substrate library.
However, this high specificity is not retained during proteolysis
of endogenous substrates as shown by mass spectrometric analysis of
peptides produced in ClpXP-mediated degradation reactions. Our data
suggest a mechanism that implicates the barrel-shaped architecture
of ClpP not only in shielding the active sites to prevent uncontrolled
proteolysis but also in providing high local substrate concentrations
to enable efficient proteolytic processing. Furthermore, we introduce
customized fluorogenic substrates with unnatural amino acids that
greatly surpass the sensitivity of previously used tools. We used
these to profile the activity of cancer-patient- and Perrault-syndrome-derived
ClpP mutant proteins.