4.5 Article

PDZ domains of RseP are not essential for sequential cleavage of RseA or stress-induced sE activation in vivo

Journal

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 86, Issue 5, Pages 1232-1245

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mmi.12053

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National BioResource Project E. coli [JW0940, JW2203, JW0198]
  2. Institute for Fermentation, Osaka
  3. JSPS KAKENHI [24370054]
  4. MEXT KAKENHI [19058007]
  5. JSPS
  6. [24.5188]
  7. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [12J05188, 19058007] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The Escherichia coli sE extracytoplasmic stress response monitors and responds to folding stress in the cell envelope. A protease cascade directed at RseA, a membrane-spanning anti-s that inhibits sE activity, controls this critical signal-transduction system. Stress cues activate DegS to cleave RseA; a second cleavage by RseP releases RseA from the membrane, enabling its rapid degradation. Stress control of proteolysis requires that RseP cleavage is dependent on DegS cleavage. Recent in vitro and structural studies found that RseP cleavage requires binding of RseP PDZ-C to the newly exposed C-terminal residue (Val148) of RseA, generated by DegS cleavage, explaining dependence. We tested this mechanism in vivo. Neither mutation in the putative PDZ ligand-binding regions nor even deletion of entire RseP PDZ domains had significant effects on RseA cleavage in vivo, and the C-terminal residue of DegS-processed RseA also little affected RseA cleavage. Indeed, strains with a chromosomal rseP gene deleted for either PDZ domain and strains with a chromosomal rseA V148 mutation grew normally and exhibited almost normal sE activation in response to stress signals. We conclude that recognition of the cleaved amino acid by the RseP PDZ domain is not essential for sequential cleavage of RseA and sE stress response in vivo.

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