Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.

Mitochondria have their own ATP-dependent proteases that maintain the functional state of the organelle. All multicellular eukaryotes, including filamentous fungi, possess the same set of mitochondrial proteases, unlike in unicellular yeasts, where ClpXP, one of the two matricial proteases, is absen...

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Main Authors: Céline Adam, Marguerite Picard, Michelle Déquard-Chablat, Carole H Sellem, Sylvie Hermann-Le Denmat, Véronique Contamine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3364969?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-dea2dd1d66b343aa9fb2f62e3e966f602020-11-25T01:53:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0175e3813810.1371/journal.pone.0038138Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.Céline AdamMarguerite PicardMichelle Déquard-ChablatCarole H SellemSylvie Hermann-Le DenmatVéronique ContamineMitochondria have their own ATP-dependent proteases that maintain the functional state of the organelle. All multicellular eukaryotes, including filamentous fungi, possess the same set of mitochondrial proteases, unlike in unicellular yeasts, where ClpXP, one of the two matricial proteases, is absent. Despite the presence of ClpXP in the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina, deletion of the gene encoding the other matricial protease, PaLon1, leads to lethality at high and low temperatures, indicating that PaLON1 plays a main role in protein quality control. Under normal physiological conditions, the PaLon1 deletion is viable but decreases life span. PaLon1 deletion also leads to defects in two steps during development, ascospore germination and sexual reproduction, which suggests that PaLON1 ensures important regulatory functions during fungal development. Mitochondrial Lon proteases are composed of a central ATPase domain flanked by a large non-catalytic N-domain and a C-terminal protease domain. We found that three mutations in the N-domain of PaLON1 affected fungal life cycle, PaLON1 protein expression and mitochondrial proteolytic activity, which reveals the functional importance of the N-domain of the mitochondrial Lon protease. All PaLon1 mutations affected the C-terminal part of the N-domain. Considering that the C-terminal part is predicted to have an α helical arrangement in which the number, length and position of the helices are conserved with the solved structure of its bacterial homologs, we propose that this all-helical structure participates in Lon substrate interaction.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3364969?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Céline Adam
Marguerite Picard
Michelle Déquard-Chablat
Carole H Sellem
Sylvie Hermann-Le Denmat
Véronique Contamine
spellingShingle Céline Adam
Marguerite Picard
Michelle Déquard-Chablat
Carole H Sellem
Sylvie Hermann-Le Denmat
Véronique Contamine
Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Céline Adam
Marguerite Picard
Michelle Déquard-Chablat
Carole H Sellem
Sylvie Hermann-Le Denmat
Véronique Contamine
author_sort Céline Adam
title Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.
title_short Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.
title_full Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.
title_fullStr Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.
title_full_unstemmed Biological roles of the Podospora anserina mitochondrial Lon protease and the importance of its N-domain.
title_sort biological roles of the podospora anserina mitochondrial lon protease and the importance of its n-domain.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Mitochondria have their own ATP-dependent proteases that maintain the functional state of the organelle. All multicellular eukaryotes, including filamentous fungi, possess the same set of mitochondrial proteases, unlike in unicellular yeasts, where ClpXP, one of the two matricial proteases, is absent. Despite the presence of ClpXP in the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina, deletion of the gene encoding the other matricial protease, PaLon1, leads to lethality at high and low temperatures, indicating that PaLON1 plays a main role in protein quality control. Under normal physiological conditions, the PaLon1 deletion is viable but decreases life span. PaLon1 deletion also leads to defects in two steps during development, ascospore germination and sexual reproduction, which suggests that PaLON1 ensures important regulatory functions during fungal development. Mitochondrial Lon proteases are composed of a central ATPase domain flanked by a large non-catalytic N-domain and a C-terminal protease domain. We found that three mutations in the N-domain of PaLON1 affected fungal life cycle, PaLON1 protein expression and mitochondrial proteolytic activity, which reveals the functional importance of the N-domain of the mitochondrial Lon protease. All PaLon1 mutations affected the C-terminal part of the N-domain. Considering that the C-terminal part is predicted to have an α helical arrangement in which the number, length and position of the helices are conserved with the solved structure of its bacterial homologs, we propose that this all-helical structure participates in Lon substrate interaction.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3364969?pdf=render
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