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The AAA+ ATPase Msp1 is a processive protein translocase with robust unfoldase activity.

Dominic T CastanzoBenjamin J LaFranceAndreas Martin
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Msp1 is a conserved eukaryotic AAA+ ATPase localized to the outer mitochondrial membrane, where it is thought to extract mislocalized tail-anchored proteins. Despite recent in vivo and in vitro studies supporting this function, a mechanistic understanding of how Msp1 extracts its substrates is still lacking. Msp1's ATPase activity depends on its hexameric state, and previous characterizations of the cytosolic AAA+ domain in vitro had proved challenging due to its monomeric nature in the absence of the transmembrane domain. Here, we used a hexamerization scaffold to study the substrate-processing mechanism of the soluble Msp1 motor, the functional homo-hexameric state of which was confirmed by negative-stain electron microscopy. We demonstrate that Msp1 is a robust bidirectional protein translocase that is able to unfold diverse substrates by processive threading through its central pore. This unfoldase activity is inhibited by Pex3, a membrane protein proposed to regulate Msp1 at the peroxisome.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • oxidative stress
  • electron microscopy
  • amino acid
  • structural basis