4.6 Article

FtsH degrades dihydrofolate reductase by recognizing a partially folded species

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pro.4410

Keywords

AAA plus protease; degron; folding intermediate; membrane-bound protease; protein degradation; protein stability

Funding

  1. NIH [AI-16892]

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AAA+ proteolytic machines are essential for maintaining the cellular proteome. In Escherichia coli, FtsH, a unique AAA+ protease, degrades both membrane and cytosolic proteins. Surprisingly, FtsH can also degrade a stable protein DHFR without relying on recognition of unstructured polypeptides at the N- or C-terminus. Our findings provide insights into substrate recognition by FtsH and expand its previously reported degradation capacity.
AAA+ proteolytic machines play essential roles in maintaining and rebalancing the cellular proteome in response to stress, developmental cues, and environmental changes. Of the five AAA+ proteases in Escherichia coli, FtsH is unique in its attachment to the inner membrane and its function in degrading both membrane and cytosolic proteins. E. coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is a stable and biophysically well-characterized protein, which a previous study found resisted FtsH degradation despite the presence of an ssrA degron. By contrast, we find that FtsH degrades DHFR fused to a long peptide linker and ssrA tag. Surprisingly, we also find that FtsH degrades DHFR with shorter linkers and ssrA tag, and without any linker or tag. Thus, FtsH must be able to recognize a sequence element or elements within DHFR. We find that FtsH degradation of DHFR is noncanonical in the sense that it does not rely upon recognition of an unstructured polypeptide at or near the N-terminus or C-terminus of the substrate. Results using peptide-array experiments, mutant DHFR proteins, and fusion proteins suggest that FtsH recognizes an internal sequence in a species of DHFR that is partially unfolded. Overall, our findings provide insight into substrate recognition by FtsH and indicate that its degradation capacity is broader than previously reported.

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