| Literature DB >> 18466635 |
Jamie Snider1, Guillaume Thibault, Walid A Houry.
Abstract
SUMMARY: The AAA+ superfamily is a large and functionally diverse superfamily of NTPases that are characterized by a conserved nucleotide-binding and catalytic module, the AAA+ module. Members are involved in an astonishing range of different cellular processes, attaining this functional diversity through additions of structural motifs and modifications to the core AAA+ module.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18466635 PMCID: PMC2643927 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2008-9-4-216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Classification and localization of AAA+ proteins
| Classification | Cellular localization and evolutionary distribution | |||||
| Group | Clade | Family | Localization | Distribution* | General function | References |
| Extended AAA | Classical AAA | FtsH | Chloroplast, mitochondria and bacterial membrane | E/B | Protein unfolding and degradation | [36] |
| Katanin | Cytosol | E | Microtubule severing and disassembly | [37] | ||
| NSF/CDC48 | Cytosol | E/A | Membrane fusion/ubiquitin system | [38,39] | ||
| Pex1/6 | Peroxisome | E | Peroxisome biogenesis | [40] | ||
| Bcs1p | Mitochondria | E | Cytochrome | [41] | ||
| PAAA | Cytosol/nucleus | E/A | Proteasome-associated protein unfolding and degradation | [42] | ||
| Other | Rubisco activase | Chloroplast | E | Activation of Rubisco | [43] | |
| Rvb | Cytosol and nucleus | E/A | Diverse (for example, DNA recombination/repair, transcription, snoRNP assembly) | [44] | ||
| ClpAB-D1 | Cytosol, mitochondria and chloroplast | E/A/B | Protease-associated protein unfolding and degradation/protein disaggregation | [18] | ||
| SpoVK | Cytosol | B | Unknown (sporulation associated) | [45] | ||
| Ycf2 | Chloroplast | E | Unknown | [46] | ||
| AFG1 | Mitochondria | E/B | Unknown | [47] | ||
| Viral helicase | Virus | Viruses | DNA recombination and repair | [6] | ||
| HEC | Clamp loader | HolB/DnaX | Cytosol | B | DNA replication and repair | [48] |
| RFC | Nucleus | E/A | DNA replication and repair | [48] | ||
| WHIP | Cytosol and nucleus | E/B | DNA replication and repair | [49] | ||
| Initiation | DnaA/C | Cytosol | B | DNA replication | [50] | |
| ORC/Cdc6 | Cytosol and nucleus | E/A | DNA replication | [51] | ||
| Other | RuvB | Cytosol | B | DNA recombination | [52] | |
| IstB | Cytosol | B | DNA transposition | [53] | ||
| HolA | Cytosol | B | DNA replication and repair | [48] | ||
| PACTT | HCL | HslU/ClpX | Cytosol and mitochondria | E/B | Protease-associated protein unfolding and degradation | [18] |
| ClpAB-D2/Torsin | Cytosol, mitochondria, ER and chloroplast | E/A/B | Protease-associated protein unfolding and degradation/protein disaggregation/ER complex assembly | [54] | ||
| LonA | Cytosol and mitochondria | E/B | Protein unfolding and degradation | [55] | ||
| Helix 2 insert | MCM | Cytosol and nucleus | E/A | DNA replication (helicase activity) | [56] | |
| McrB/Unc-53 | Cytosol and nucleus | E/A/B | DNA restriction/unknown | [57] | ||
| Midasin | Nucleus | E | Maturation and nuclear export of ribosomes | [58] | ||
| MoxR | Cytosol | A/B | Protein complex assembly | [59] | ||
| Chelatase | Cytosol and chloroplast | E/A/B | Metal insertion | [24] | ||
| σ54 Activator | Cytosol | B | Transcriptional activation | [60] | ||
| YifB | Cytosol | B | Unknown | [1] | ||
| ComM | Cytosol | B | Unknown | [61] | ||
| Other | Dynein heavy chain | Cytosol | E | Molecular transport and cilia/flagellar movement | [29] | |
| LonB | Membrane | A | Protein unfolding and degradation | [55] | ||
| ExeA | Cytosol | B | Type II secretion | [62] | ||
| STAND | Varied | E/A/B | Varied | [63] | ||
*A, B and E refer to archaea, bacteria and eukaryotes, respectively.
Figure 1Structure of the AAA+ module. (a) Monomeric AAA+ module of Aquifex aeolicus DnaA, a protein involved in the initiation of DNA replication (Protein Data Bank (PDB) code 2HCB) [5]. The α-helices and random coils are in green and the β-strands of the core αβα nucleotide-binding domain are in blue, with the exception of the two equal-sized helical inserts, which are colored pink. The small α-helical domain is colored purple. (b) Major motifs in the AAA+ module of (a) are colored as indicated in the key, on the basis of the alignment in reference [3]. The bound adenosine 5'-[β,γ-methylene]triphosphate (β,γ-methylene-ATP, a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, orange sticks) and Mg2+ (black sphere) are also shown. (c) Top and side views of the hexameric structure of Haemophilus influenzae HslU, a member of the HslU/ClpX family (PDB 1KYI) [64]. α-Helices, including random coils, and β-strands of the core αβα nucleotide-binding domain are colored green and blue, respectively. Two additional helices characteristic of HslU-family proteins, called the I domain, are colored orange, and an additional extended loop between the second core β-strand and the following helix is colored in pink. The core small α-helical domain is colored purple, with the two-stranded β-sheet insertion in yellow. Structures were drawn using PyMOL [65].
Figure 2Structures of the AAA+ modules of selected superfamilymembers (see Table 1). The core αβα nucleotide-binding domains are shown in green (α-helices and random coil) and blue (β-strands). The small, α-helical domain of each AAA+ module is shown in purple. The canonical AAA+ module structure is exemplified by that of RFC1, which is shown in the center. (a) Representative members of the extended AAA group [6]. The FtsH AAA+ module from Thermus thermophilus (left, PDB 2DHR) contains an additional small helix (pink) downstream of the second β-strand, which is characteristic of the classical AAA clade [1,15]. The function of FtsH is discussed in the text. The Rvb AAA+ module, represented by human Rvb1 (center, PDB 2C90), contains a β-sheet-rich insert (pink) upstream of the Walker B motif and an additional small helix (yellow) downstream of the second β-strand of the core domain [1]. The β-sheet-rich insert is proposed to play a role in sequence-independent DNA and RNA binding [66]. The amino-terminal (D1) AAA+ modules of ClpB-type proteins are represented by a structure from T. thermophilus (right, PDB 1QVR). These proteins contain a long, leucine-rich coiled-coil propeller domain (pink) inserted into the small α-helical domain [67]. This propeller domain is proposed to play a role in interdomain communication and protein disaggregation, possibly acting as a molecular crowbar [67]. (b) Representative members of the HEC group [6]. The RFC1 AAA+ module from S. cerevisiae (center, PDB 1SXJ) represents a 'classical' AAA+ module containing no structural modifications and typifies the clamp loader clade to which it belongs [1,68]. The DnaA AAA+ module from Aquifex aeolicus (left, PDB 2HCB2HCB) contains an insert of two equal-sized helices (pink) after the second β-strand and is representative of the initiation clade [9]. The RuvB AAA+ module from T. thermophilus (right, PDB 1HQC) contains a β-hairpin insert (pink) between sensor 1 and its preceding helix [35]. This insert is characteristic of the RuvB family and is known to be important for the interaction of RuvB with RuvA in the resolution of Holliday junctions in DNA recombination [69,70]. The function of RuvB is discussed in the text. (c) Representatives of the PACTT group. Members of this group all contain a β-hairpin insert (cyan, shown in all three structures) between the sensor 1 strand and the preceding helix [1]. The BchI AAA+ module from Rhodobacter capsulatus Mg2+ chelatase (left, PDB 1G8P) belongs to the helix-2 insert clade. Members of this clade contain a small insert of two β-strands flanking a small α-helix (pink) in helix 2 of the αβα core domain and a long helical insert (yellow) between the fifth β-strand of the core domain and the small α-helical domain [1,24]. BchI proteins also contain a long, highly conserved β-hairpin insert (orange) upstream of the second β-strand of the core domain [24]. The function of BchI is discussed in the text. The carboxy-terminal ClpA AAA+ module (D2) from Escherichia coli (center, PDB 1KSF) [71] and the HslU AAA+ module from E. coli (right, PDB 1G4A) [72] are both representative members of the HCL clade, whose members are involved in protein unfolding and degradation. These structures contain an extended loop (pink) between the second core β-strand and the following helix [1] and a two or three stranded β-sheet insert (yellow) in the small α-helical domain of the AAA+ module, both characteristic of this clade. In addition, HslU family members contain an additional 130 amino acid I domain (orange, only part of the domain is resolved in the crystal structure) inserted into the core αβα domain of the AAA+ module, which is proposed to play a role in substrate recognition and unfolding [73].