4.6 Article

Interaction between the AAA+ ATPase p97 and its cofactor ataxin3 in health and disease: Nucleotide-induced conformational changes regulate cofactor binding

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 292, Issue 45, Pages 18392-18407

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.806281

Keywords

ATPases associated with diverse cellular activities (AAA); conformational change; electron microscopy (EM); proteostasis; surface plasmon resonance (SPR); ataxin3; cofactor binding; multisystem proteinopathy 1 (MSP1); nucleotide regulation; p97; VCP

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS065140]
  2. NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA56036]

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p97 is an essential ATPase associated with various cellular activities (AAA(+)) that functions as a segregase in diverse cellular processes, including the maintenance of proteostasis. p97 interacts with different cofactors that target it to distinct pathways; an important example is the deubiquitinase ataxin3, which collaborates with p97 in endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation. However, the molecular details of this interaction have been unclear. Here, we characterized the binding of ataxin3 to p97, showing that ataxin3 binds with low-micromolar affinity to both wild-type p97 and mutants linked to degenerative disorders known as multisystem proteinopathy 1 (MSP1); we further showed that the stoichiometry of binding is one ataxin3 molecule per p97 hexamer. We mapped the binding determinants on each protein, demonstrating that ataxin3's p97/VCP-binding motif interacts with the inter-lobe cleft in the N-domain of p97. We also probed the nucleotide dependence of this interaction, confirming that ataxin3 and p97 associate in the presence of ATP and in the absence of nucleotide, but not in the presence of ADP. Our experiments suggest that an ADP-driven downward movement of the p97 N-terminal domain dislodges ataxin3 by inducing a steric clash between the D1-domain and ataxin3's C terminus. In contrast, MSP1 mutants of p97 bind ataxin3 irrespective of their nucleotide state, indicating a failure by these mutants to translate ADP binding into a movement of the N-terminal domain. Our model provides a mechanistic explanation for how nucleotides regulate the p97-ataxin3 interaction and why atypical cofactor binding is observed with MSP1 mutants.

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