Protein Synthesis and Degradation
Activity of the Mycobacterial Proteasomal ATPase Mpa Is Reversibly Regulated by Pupylation*

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Pupylation is a bacterial post-translational modification of target proteins on lysine residues with prokaryotic ubiquitin-like protein Pup. Pup-tagged substrates are recognized by a proteasome-interacting ATPase termed Mpa in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Mpa unfolds pupylated substrates and threads them into the proteasome core particle for degradation. Interestingly, Mpa itself is also a pupylation target. Here, we show that the Pup ligase PafA predominantly produces monopupylated Mpa modified homogeneously on a single lysine residue within its C-terminal region. We demonstrate that this modification renders Mpa functionally inactive. Pupylated Mpa can no longer support Pup-mediated proteasomal degradation due to its inability to associate with the proteasome core. Mpa is further inactivated by rapid Pup- and ATPase-driven deoligomerization of the hexameric Mpa ring. We show that pupylation of Mpa is chemically and functionally reversible. Mpa regains its enzymatic activity upon depupylation by the depupylase Dop, affording a rapid and reversible activity control over Mpa function.

ATP-dependent Protease
ATPases
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Proteasome
Protein Degradation
Ubiquitination
Mpa
Post-translational Modification
Prokaryotic Ubiquitin-like Protein
Pupylation

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*

This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation, the National Center for Excellence in Research Structural Biology program of the Swiss National Science Foundation, an ETH research grant, and a Kékulé fellowship by the “Fonds der Chemischen Industrie” (to F. S.).

This article contains supplemental Fig. S1.

1

Both authors contributed equally to this work.

2

Present address: Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, 82152 Martinsried, Germany.