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To Degrade or Not to Degrade: Substrate Recognition by Lon Protease

To Degrade or Not to Degrade: Substrate Recognition by Lon Protease. Amy Dinh Department of Microbiology Mentor: Janine E. Trempy, Ph.D. Protein Misfolding Diseases. abnormal protein. normal protein. protein aggregate. Treatment Issues. Aggregates cause disease or caused by disease

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To Degrade or Not to Degrade: Substrate Recognition by Lon Protease

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  1. To Degrade or Not to Degrade: Substrate Recognition by Lon Protease Amy Dinh Department of Microbiology Mentor: Janine E. Trempy, Ph.D.

  2. Protein Misfolding Diseases abnormalprotein normal protein protein aggregate

  3. Treatment Issues • Aggregates cause disease or caused by disease • Cause of abnormal proteins? • Result of malfunction of related protein? ADDL aggregates (yellow) coating a neuron in Alzheimer’s Disease. Scientific American

  4. Studying Human Lon with E. coli • lon • ATP dependent protease • highly conserved in evolution • four known substrates in E. coli • NO known substrates in humans

  5. Aims • Study how E. coli Lon interacts with its substrates • Help identify human Lon substrates • Substrates with effects on central nervous system • Identify relationship between CNS substrates and abnormal proteins

  6. Research Methods • E. coli Lon interactions with two substrates • RcsA • SulA • Control physiological effects • Clear phenotypes

  7. transcriptional activator of capsular polysaccharide genes (mucoidy) RcsA lon+ lon- RcsA intiates CPS transcription RcsA initiates CPS transcription Lon degrades RcsA RcsA not degraded Non-mucoid cell Mucoid cell

  8. SulA • SulA (SOS gene) • halts cell division • filament formation Cells exposed to MMS/UV SulA causes filament formation SulA degraded (lon+) SulA not degraded ((lon-) Filaments resolved into new cells Cell death

  9. Prior Research Proteolytic Binding Site SulA SulA Lon Lon RcsA RcsA Competition Hierarchy

  10. N-terminus velcro domain RcsA recognition Site Lon Domains SulA recognition Site? aa residue # 369 411 679 211-271 421 783 351 1 Met Ser C-terminus ATP Binding Site Proteolytic Bindng Site

  11. GCATTGCGGGGCTATCGGTCACACTGCATCGTCATCGAATCGGGCGCGCCCTGATTGA CGTAACGCCCCGATAGCCAGTGTGACGTAGCAGTAGCTTAGCCCGCGCGGGACTAACT Making Mutants • Mutagenesis • K11 and Tll strains • Contain antibiotic resistance gene linked to lon • methylating agent: nitrosoguanidine (NTG) • Generation of random point mutations

  12. 10 minutes lon Making Mutants • DNA Packaging • P1vir Lysates • P1vir Bacteriophage • ~100 kb (20 genes) 100/0 11 minutes Tetr / Kanr 45 75 50

  13. Making Mutants • Transduction • Infection of healthy E. coli with P1vir tetr/ kanr tetr/ kanr mutated lon mutated lon normal lon normal lon E.coli E.coli Infection P1 vir Recombination P1 vir

  14. Making Mutants • Requires several phases of screening • 1. Selection for mutations on lon • Mutant behavior re: RcsA

  15. 10 minutes lon Screening for Mutants • Limited DNA capacity 100/0 11 minutes Tetr / Kanr 45 75 50

  16. Screening for Mutants • Requires several phases of screening • 1. Selection for mutations on lon • Mutant behavior re: RcsA • 2. Screening using temperature selection

  17. Low temperatures Protein folding normal Wild type behavior High temperatures Abnormal protein folding Mutant behavior Temperature Selection Hypothesis Lon Lon

  18. Screening for Mutants • Requires several phases of screening • 1. Selection for mutations on lon • Mutant behavior re: RcsA • 2. Screening using temperature selection • 3. Screening using temperature selection and MMS • Mutant behavior re: SulA

  19. Normal cells Mutant Classes • I: Lon defective with RcsA Mucoid

  20. Mutant Classes • II: Lon defective with SulA NormalCell Filamentation/ Cell Death On MMS at 42º

  21. Mutant Classes • III: Lon defective with RcsA and SulA CellDeath Normal cells Mucoid On MMS at 42º

  22. Mutant Classes • IV: Lon Gone Wild NormalCell Cell Death At 42º

  23. Mutants Isolated • 8 Class I Mutants • Lon Defective with RcsA • 3 Class II Mutants • Lon Defective with SulA • Intermediate MMS sensitivity • 2 Class IV Mutants • Lon Gone Wild • Validates Temperature Selection Hypothesis

  24. Next Steps • Mutant Verification/Identification • Presence of Lon/RcsA/SulA • Western Blot • Amplify lon using PCR • Sequence DNA • Compare Mutant Sequence with E. coli lon sequence

  25. Why Bother? • Learn how Lon selects its substrates in E. coli • A model for Lon in humans • Help identify Lon substrates in humans • Understand more about age-related protein misfolding diseases

  26. Acknowledgements • Dr. Janine Trempy • Howard Hughes Medical Institute • HHMI Selection Committee • Undergraduate Research, Innovation, Scholarship and Creativity (URISC) Program • URISC Selection Committee

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