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Dive into the research topics where Igor Levchenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Igor Levchenko.


Cell | 2004

Sculpting the Proteome with AAA+ Proteases and Disassembly Machines

Robert T. Sauer; Daniel N. Bolon; Briana M. Burton; Randall E. Burton; Julia M. Flynn; Robert A. Grant; Greg L. Hersch; Shilpa A. Joshi; Jon A. Kenniston; Igor Levchenko; Saskia B. Neher; Elizabeth C. Oakes; Samia M. Siddiqui; David A. Wah; Tania A. Baker

Machines of protein destruction-including energy-dependent proteases and disassembly chaperones of the AAA(+) ATPase family-function in all kingdoms of life to sculpt the cellular proteome, ensuring that unnecessary and dangerous proteins are eliminated and biological responses to environmental change are rapidly and properly regulated. Exciting progress has been made in understanding how AAA(+) machines recognize specific proteins as targets and then carry out ATP-dependent dismantling of the tertiary and/or quaternary structure of these molecules during the processes of protein degradation and the disassembly of macromolecular complexes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Overlapping recognition determinants within the ssrA degradation tag allow modulation of proteolysis

Julia M. Flynn; Igor Levchenko; Meredith Seidel; Sue Wickner; Robert T. Sauer; Tania A. Baker

The ssrA tag, an 11-aa peptide added to the C terminus of proteins stalled during translation, targets proteins for degradation by ClpXP and ClpAP. Mutational analysis of the ssrA tag reveals independent, but overlapping determinants for its interactions with ClpX, ClpA, and SspB, a specificity-enhancing factor for ClpX. ClpX interacts with residues 9–11 at the C terminus of the tag, whereas ClpA recognizes positions 8–10 in addition to residues 1–2 at the N terminus. SspB interacts with residues 1–4 and 7, N-terminal to the ClpX-binding determinants, but overlapping the ClpA determinants. As a result, SspB and ClpX work together to recognize ssrA-tagged substrates efficiently, whereas SspB inhibits recognition of these substrates by ClpA. Thus, dissection of the recognition signals within the ssrA tag provides insight into how multiple proteins function in concert to modulate proteolysis.


Cell | 1997

PDZ-like Domains Mediate Binding Specificity in the Clp/Hsp100 Family of Chaperones and Protease Regulatory Subunits

Igor Levchenko; Catherine K. Smith; Nathan P. Walsh; Robert T. Sauer; Tania A. Baker

ClpX, a molecular chaperone and the regulatory subunit of the ClpXP protease, is shown to contain tandem modular domains that bind to the C-terminal sequences of target proteins in a manner that parallels functional specificity. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies show that these C-terminal sequences are displayed as disordered peptides on the surface of otherwise folded proteins. The ClpX substrate-binding domains are homologous to sequences in other Clp/Hsp100 proteins and are related more distantly to PDZ domains, which also mediate C-terminal specific protein-protein interactions. Conservation of these binding domains indicates that the mode of substrate recognition characterized here for ClpX will be a conserved feature among Clp/Hsp100 family members and a distinguishing characteristic between this chaperone family and the Hsp70 chaperones.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Flexible Linkers Leash the Substrate Binding Domain of SspB to a Peptide Module that Stabilizes Delivery Complexes with the AAA+ ClpXP Protease

David A. Wah; Igor Levchenko; Gabrielle E. Rieckhof; Daniel N. Bolon; Tania A. Baker; Robert T. Sauer

SspB dimers bind proteins bearing the ssrA-degradation tag and stimulate their degradation by the ClpXP protease. Here, E. coli SspB is shown to contain a dimeric substrate binding domain of 110-120 N-terminal residues, which binds ssrA-tagged substrates but does not stimulate their degradation. The C-terminal 40-50 residues of SspB are unstructured but are required for SspB to form substrate-delivery complexes with ClpXP. A synthetic peptide containing the 10 C-terminal residues of SspB binds ClpX, stimulates its ATPase activity, and prevents SspB-mediated delivery of GFP-ssrA for ClpXP degradation. This tripartite structure--an ssrA-tag binding and dimerization domain, a flexible linker, and a short peptide module that docks with ClpX--allows SspB to deliver tagged substrates to ClpXP without interfering with their denaturation or degradation.


Chemistry & Biology | 2002

Characterization of a Specificity Factor for an AAA+ ATPase: Assembly of SspB Dimers with ssrA-Tagged Proteins and the ClpX Hexamer

David A. Wah; Igor Levchenko; Tania A. Baker; Robert T. Sauer

SspB, a specificity factor for the ATP-dependent ClpXP protease, stimulates proteolysis of protein substrates bearing the ssrA degradation tag. The SspB protein is shown here to form a stable homodimer with two independent binding sites for ssrA-tagged proteins or peptides. SspB by itself binds to ClpX and stimulates the ATPase activity of this enzyme. In the presence of ATPgammaS, a ternary complex of SspB, GFP-ssrA, and the ClpX ATPase was sufficiently stable to isolate by gel-filtration or ion-exchange chromatography. This complex consists of one SspB dimer, two molecules of GFP-ssrA, and one ClpX hexamer. SspB dimers do not commit bound substrates to ClpXP degradation but increase the affinity and cooperativity of binding of ssrA-tagged substrates to ClpX, facilitating enhanced degradation at low substrate concentrations.


Chemistry & Biology | 2009

Polypeptide Translocation by the AAA+ ClpXP Protease Machine

Sarah R. Barkow; Igor Levchenko; Tania A. Baker; Robert T. Sauer

In the AAA+ ClpXP protease, ClpX uses repeated cycles of ATP hydrolysis to pull native proteins apart and to translocate the denatured polypeptide into ClpP for degradation. Here, we probe polypeptide features important for translocation. ClpXP degrades diverse synthetic peptide substrates despite major differences in side-chain chirality, size, and polarity. Moreover, translocation occurs without a peptide -NH and with 10 methylenes between successive peptide bonds. Pulling on homopolymeric tracts of glycine, proline, and lysine also allows efficient ClpXP degradation of a stably folded protein. Thus, minimal chemical features of a polypeptide chain are sufficient for translocation and protein unfolding by the ClpX machine. These results suggest that the translocation pore of ClpX is highly elastic, allowing interactions with a wide range of chemical groups, a feature likely to be shared by many AAA+ unfoldases.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2005

Versatile modes of peptide recognition by the AAA+ adaptor protein SspB.

Igor Levchenko; Robert A. Grant; Julia M. Flynn; Robert T. Sauer; Tania A. Baker

Energy-dependent proteases often rely on adaptor proteins to modulate substrate recognition. The SspB adaptor binds peptide sequences in the stress-response regulator RseA and in ssrA-tagged proteins and delivers these molecules to the AAA+ ClpXP protease for degradation. The structure of SspB bound to an ssrA peptide is known. Here, we report the crystal structure of a complex between SspB and its recognition peptide in RseA. Notably, the RseA sequence is positioned in the peptide-binding groove of SspB in a direction opposite to the ssrA peptide, the two peptides share only one common interaction with the adaptor, and the RseA interaction site is substantially larger than the overlapping ssrA site. This marked diversity in SspB recognition of different target proteins indicates that it is capable of highly flexible and dynamic substrate delivery.


Genes & Development | 2012

RpoS proteolysis is controlled directly by ATP levels in Escherichia coli

Celeste N. Peterson; Igor Levchenko; Joshua D. Rabinowitz; Tania A. Baker; Thomas J. Silhavy

The master regulator of stationary phase in Escherichia coli, RpoS, responds to carbon availability through changes in stability, but the individual steps in the pathway are unknown. Here we systematically block key steps of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle and monitor the effect on RpoS degradation in vivo. Nutrient upshifts trigger RpoS degradation independently of protein synthesis by activating metabolic pathways that generate small energy molecules. Using metabolic mutants and inhibitors, we show that ATP, but not GTP or NADH, is necessary for RpoS degradation. In vitro reconstitution assays directly demonstrate that ClpXP fails to degrade RpoS, but not other proteins, at low ATP hydrolysis rates. These data suggest that cellular ATP levels directly control RpoS stability.


Science | 2000

A Specificity-Enhancing Factor for the ClpXP Degradation Machine

Igor Levchenko; Meredith Seidel; Robert T. Sauer; Tania A. Baker


Genes & Development | 1995

Disassembly of the Mu transposase tetramer by the ClpX chaperone.

Igor Levchenko; Li Luo; Tania A. Baker

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Tania A. Baker

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Robert T. Sauer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David A. Wah

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Julia M. Flynn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Robert A. Grant

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Daniel N. Bolon

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Meredith Seidel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Sarah R. Barkow

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Catherine K. Smith

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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