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The allosteric transition in DnaK probed by infrared difference spectroscopy. Concerted ATP‐induced rearrangement of the substrate binding domain
Author(s) -
Moro Fernando,
FernándezSáiz Vanesa,
Muga Arturo
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1110/ps.051732706
Subject(s) - allosteric regulation , cyclic nucleotide binding domain , biophysics , peptide , chemistry , nucleotide , atpase , substrate (aquarium) , conformational change , binding site , protein structure , crystallography , stereochemistry , biochemistry , enzyme , biology , ecology , gene
The biological activity of DnaK, the bacterial representative of the Hsp70 protein family, is regulated by the allosteric interaction between its nucleotide and peptide substrate binding domains. Despite the importance of the nucleotide‐induced cycling of DnaK between substrate‐accepting and releasing states, the heterotropic allosteric mechanism remains as yet undefined. To further characterize this mechanism, the nucleotide‐induced absorbance changes in the vibrational spectrum of wild‐type DnaK was characterized. To assign the conformation sensitive absorption bands, two deletion mutants (one lacking the C‐terminal α‐helical subdomain and another comprising only the N‐terminal ATPase domain), and a single‐point DnaK mutant (T199A) with strongly reduced ATPase activity, were investigated by time‐resolved infrared difference spectroscopy combined with the use of caged‐nucleotides. The results indicate that (1) ATP, but not ADP, binding promotes a conformational change in both subdomains of the peptide binding domain that can be individually resolved; (2) these conformational changes are kinetically coupled, most likely to ensure a decrease in the affinity of DnaK for peptide substrates and a concomitant displacement of the lid away from the peptide binding site that would promote efficient diffusion of the released peptide to the medium; and (3) the α‐helical subdomain contributes to stabilize the interdomain interface against the thermal challenge and allows bidirectional transmission of the allosteric signal between the ATPase and substrate binding domains at stress temperatures (42°C).

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