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1.
In Escherichia coli, the ribosome-associated chaperone Trigger Factor (TF) promotes the folding of newly synthesized cytosolic proteins. TF is composed of three domains: an N-terminal domain (N), which mediates ribosome binding; a central domain (P), which has peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase activity and is involved in substrate binding in vitro; and a C-terminal domain (C) with unknown function. We investigated the contributions of individual domains (N, P, and C) or domain combinations (NP, PC, and NC) to the chaperone activity of TF in vivo and in vitro. All fragments comprising the N domain (N, NP, NC) complemented the synthetic lethality of Deltatig DeltadnaK in cells lacking TF and DnaK, prevented protein aggregation in these cells, and cross-linked to nascent polypeptides in vitro. However, DeltatigDeltadnaK cells expressing the N domain alone grew more slowly and showed less viability than DeltatigDeltadnaK cells synthesizing either NP, NC, or full-length TF, indicating beneficial contributions of the P and C domains to TF's chaperone activity. In an in vitro system with purified components, none of the TF fragments assisted the refolding of denatured d-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in a manner comparable to that of wild-type TF, suggesting that the observed chaperone activity of TF fragments in vivo is dependent on their localization at the ribosome. These results indicate that the N domain, in addition to its function to promote binding to the ribosome, has a chaperone activity per se and is sufficient to substitute for TF in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Eukaryotic ribosomes carry a stable chaperone complex termed ribosome-associated complex consisting of the J-domain protein Zuo1 and the Hsp70 Ssz1. Zuo1 and Ssz1 together with the Hsp70 homolog Ssb1/2 form a functional triad involved in translation and early polypeptide folding processes. Strains lacking one of these components display slow growth, cold sensitivity, and defects in translational fidelity. Ssz1 diverges from canonical Hsp70s insofar that neither the ability to hydrolyze ATP nor binding to peptide substrates is essential in vivo. The exact role within the chaperone triad and whether or not Ssz1 can hydrolyze ATP has remained unclear. We now find that Ssz1 is not an ATPase in vitro, and even its ability to bind ATP is dispensable in vivo. Furthermore, Ssz1 function was independent of ribosome-associated complex formation, indicating that Ssz1 is not merely a structural scaffold for Zuo1. Finally, Ssz1 function in vivo was inactivated when both nucleotide binding and Zuo1 interaction via the C-terminal domain were disrupted in the same mutant. The two domains of this protein thus cooperate in a way that allows for severe interference in either but not in both of them.  相似文献   

3.
The ribosome-associated chaperone trigger factor (TF) of Escherichia coli interacts with a variety of newly synthesized polypeptides to assist their correct folding. Here, we report that the TF of thermophilic eubacterium, Thermus thermophilus, arrested spontaneous folding of green fluorescent protein by forming a 1:1 binary complex. The complex was isolable by gel-filtration but was shown to be dynamic because green fluorescent protein was released by alpha-casein in large excess. Unexpectedly, EDTA completely abolished the folding-arrest activity of TF, and analysis revealed that the TF from our preparation contained approximately 0.5 mol Zn2+/mol TF. The folding-arrest activity of TF that was saturated with Zn2+ (approximately 1 mol/mol TF) was twice as efficient as that of untreated TF. Thus, chaperone activity of thermophilic TF is Zn2+-dependent.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Zeng LL  Yu L  Li ZY  Perrett S  Zhou JM 《Biochimie》2006,88(6):613-619
To examine the role of the C-terminal domain in the chaperone function of trigger factor (TF), a number of truncation mutants were constructed, namely: TF419, TF389, TF380, TF360, TF344, and TF251, in which the C-terminal 13, 43, 52, 72, 88 residues or the entire C-domain were deleted, respectively. Co-expression of mutant chicken adenylate kinase (AK) with TF and the C-terminal truncation mutants was achieved using a plasmid pBVAT that allows expression of TF and AK from a single plasmid. The results show that truncation of the C-terminus of TF has only minor effect on its ability to assist AK refolding in vivo. Further, ribosome-binding experiments indicate that C-terminal truncation mutants can still bind to the ribosome and the presence of the C-terminus may in fact lower the affinity of TF for the ribosome in vivo. This indicates that the C-domain of trigger factor may not be essential for the ribosome-associated molecular chaperone function of TF. However, the purified TF C-terminal truncation mutants had a dramatically reduced ability to assist rabbit muscle GAPDH refolding in vitro and a reduced tendency to dimerize. This shows that the structural integrity of the C-terminus contributes to both the chaperone function of TF and the stability of the dimeric form.  相似文献   

6.
Chaperone binding at the ribosomal exit tunnel   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The exit tunnel region of the ribosome is well established as a focal point for interaction between the components that guide the fate of nascent polypeptides. One of these, the chaperone trigger factor (TF), associates with the 50S ribosomal subunit through its N-terminal domain. Targeting of TF to ribosomes is crucial to achieve its remarkable efficiency in protein folding. A similar tight coupling to translation is found in signal recognition particle (SRP)-dependent protein translocation. Here, we report crystal structures of the E. coli TF ribosome binding domain. TF is structurally related to the Hsp33 chaperone but has a prominent ribosome anchor located as a tip of the molecule. This tip includes the previously established unique TF signature motif. Comparison reveals that this feature is not found in SRP structures. We identify a conserved helical kink as a hallmark of the TF structure that is most likely critical to ensure ribosome association.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Ssbs of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are ribosome-associated molecular chaperones, which can be cross-linked to nascent polypeptide chains. Because Ssbs are members of a divergent subclass of Hsp70s found thus far only in fungi, we asked if the structural requirements for in vivo function were similar to those of "classic" Hsp70s. An intact peptide-binding domain is essential and an alteration of a conserved residue in the peptide-binding cleft (V442) affects function. However, Ssb tolerates a number of alterations in the peptide-binding cleft, revealing a high degree of flexibility in its functional requirements. Because binding of Ssb to peptide substrates in vitro was undetectable, we assessed the importance of substrate binding using the chimera BAB, in which the peptide binding domain of Ssb is exchanged for the analogous domain of the more "classical" Hsp70, Ssa. BAB, which binds peptide substrates in vitro, can substitute for Ssb in vivo. Alteration of a residue in the peptide-binding cleft of BAB creates a protein with a reduced affinity for peptide and altered ribosome binding that is unable to substitute for Ssb in vivo. These results indicate that Ssb's ability to bind unfolded polypeptides is likely critical for its function. This binding accounts, in part, for its stable interaction with translating ribosomes, even although it has a low affinity for peptides that detectably bind to other Hsp70s in vitro. These unusual properties may allow Ssb to function efficiently as a chaperone for ribosome-bound nascent chains.  相似文献   

9.
In eukaryotes, newly synthesized proteins interact co-translationally with a multitude of different ribosome-bound factors and chaperones including the conserved heterodimeric nascent polypeptide-associated complex (NAC) and a Hsp40/70-based chaperone system. These factors are thought to play an important role in protein folding and targeting, yet their specific ribosomal localizations, which are prerequisite for their functions, remain elusive. This study describes the ribosomal localization of NAC and the molecular details by which NAC is able to contact the ribosome and gain access to nascent polypeptides. We identified a conserved RRK(X)nKK ribosome binding motif within the beta-subunit of NAC that is essential for the entire NAC complex to attach to ribosomes and allow for its interaction with nascent polypeptide chains. The motif localizes within a potential loop region between two predicted alpha-helices in the N terminus of betaNAC. This N-terminal betaNAC ribosome-binding domain was completely portable and sufficient to target an otherwise cytosolic protein to the ribosome. NAC modified with a UV-activatable cross-linker within its ribosome binding motif specifically cross-linked to L23 ribosomal protein family members at the exit site of the ribosome, providing the first evidence of NAC-L23 interaction in the context of the ribosome. Mutations of L23 reduced NAC ribosome binding in vivo and in vitro, whereas other eukaryotic ribosome-associated factors such as the Hsp70/40 chaperones Ssb or Zuotin were unaffected. We conclude that NAC employs a conserved ribosome binding domain to position itself on the L23 ribosomal protein adjacent to the nascent polypeptide exit site.  相似文献   

10.
Bacterial ribosomes or their 50S subunit can refold many unfolded proteins. The folding activity resides in domain V of 23S RNA of the 50S subunit. Here we show that ribosomes can also refold a denatured chaperone, DnaK, in vitro, and the activity may apply in the folding of nascent DnaK polypeptides in vivo. The chaperone was unusual as the native protein associated with the 50S subunit stably with a 1:1 stoichiometry in vitro. The binding site of the native protein appears to be different from the domain V of 23S RNA, the region with which denatured proteins interact. The DnaK binding influenced the protein folding activity of domain V modestly. Conversely, denatured protein binding to domain V led to dissociation of the native chaperone from the 50S subunit. DnaK thus appears to depend on ribosomes for its own folding, and upon folding, can rebind to ribosome to modulate its general protein folding activity.  相似文献   

11.
Hays JL  Watowich SJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(32):10570-10578
Although oligomerization of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) is necessary for receptor activation and signaling, a quantitative understanding of how oligomerization mediates these critical processes does not exist. We present a comparative thermodynamic analysis of functionally active dimeric and functionally inactive monomeric soluble analogues of the c-MET RTK, which clearly reveal that oligomerization regulates the binding affinity and binding kinetics of the kinase toward ATP and tyrosine-containing peptide substrates. Thermodynamic binding data for oligomeric c-MET were obtained from the dimeric TPR-MET oncoprotein, a functionally active fusion derivative of the c-MET RTK. This naturally occurring oncoprotein contains the cytoplasmic domain of c-MET fused to a coiled coil dimerization domain from the nuclear pore complex. Comparative data were obtained from a soluble monomeric kinase compromising the c-MET cytoplasmic domain (cytoMET). Significantly, under equilibrium binding conditions, the oligomeric phosphorylated kinase showed a significantly lower dissociation constant (K(d,dimer) = 11 microM) for a tyrosine-containing peptide derived from the C-terminal tail of the c-MET RTK when compared to the phosphorylated monomeric kinase cytoMET (K(d,monomer) = 140 microM). Surprisingly, equilibrium dissociation constants measured for the kinase and ATP were independent of the oligomerization state of the kinase (approximately 10 microM). Stopped-flow analysis of peptide substrate binding showed that the association rate constants (k(2)) differed 2-fold and dissociation rate constants (k(-2)) differed 10-fold when phosphorylated TPR-MET was compared to phosphorylated cytoMET. ATP binding abrogated the differences in k(2) rates observed between the two oligomeric states of the c-MET cytoplasmic domain. These results clearly imply that oligomerization induces important thermodynamic and conformational changes in the substrate binding regions of the c-MET protein and provide quantitative mechanistic insights into the necessary role of oligomerization in RTK activation.  相似文献   

12.
Ribosome-associated chaperone Trigger Factor (TF) initiates folding of newly synthesized proteins in bacteria. Here, we pinpoint by site-specific crosslinking the sequence of molecular interactions of Escherichia coli TF and nascent chains during translation. Furthermore, we provide the first full-length structure of TF associated with ribosome-nascent chain complexes by using cryo-electron microscopy. In its active state, TF arches over the ribosomal exit tunnel accepting nascent chains in a protective void. The growing nascent chain initially follows a predefined path through the entire interior of TF in an unfolded conformation, and even after folding into a domain it remains accommodated inside the protective cavity of ribosome-bound TF. The adaptability to accept nascent chains of different length and folding states may explain how TF is able to assist co-translational folding of all kinds of nascent polypeptides during ongoing synthesis. Moreover, we suggest a model of how TF's chaperoning function can be coordinated with the co-translational processing and membrane targeting of nascent polypeptides by other ribosome-associated factors.  相似文献   

13.
Dynamics of trigger factor interaction with translating ribosomes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In all organisms ribosome-associated chaperones assist early steps of protein folding. To elucidate the mechanism of their action, we determined the kinetics of individual steps of the ribosome binding/release cycle of bacterial trigger factor (TF), using fluorescently labeled chaperone and ribosome-nascent chain complexes. Both the association and dissociation rates of TF-ribosome complexes are modulated by nascent chains, whereby their length, sequence, and folding status are influencing parameters. However, the effect of the folding status is modest, indicating that TF can bind small globular domains and accommodate them within its substrate binding cavity. In general, the presence of a nascent chain causes an up to 9-fold increase in the rate of TF association, which provides a kinetic explanation for the observed ability of TF to efficiently compete with other cytosolic chaperones for binding to nascent chains. Furthermore, a subset of longer nascent polypeptides promotes the stabilization of TF-ribosome complexes, which increases the half-life of these complexes from 15 to 50 s. Nascent chains thus regulate their folding environment generated by ribosome-associated chaperones.  相似文献   

14.
Liu CP  Li ZY  Huang GC  Perrett S  Zhou JM 《Biochimie》2005,87(11):1023-1031
Trigger factor (TF) is an important catalyst of nascent peptide folding and possesses both peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) and chaperone activities. TF has a modular structure, containing three domains with distinct structural and functional properties. The guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) induced unfolding of TF was investigated by monitoring Trp fluorescence, far-UV CD, second-derivative UV absorption, enzymatic and chaperone activities, chemical crosslinking and binding of the hydrophobic dye, 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonate (ANS); and was compared to the urea induced unfolding. The native state of TF was found to bind ANS in 1:1 stoichiometry with a K(d) of 84 microM. A native-like state, N', is stable around 0.5 M GuHCl, and shows increased ANS binding, while retaining PPIase activity and most secondary and tertiary structure, but loses chaperone and dimerization activities, consistent with slight conformational rearrangement. A compact denatured state, I, is populated around 1.0 M GuHCl, is inactive and does not show significant binding to ANS. The data suggest that TF unfolds in a stepwise manner, consistent with its modular structure. The ability of TF to undergo structural rearrangement to maintain enzymatic activity while reducing chaperone and dimerization abilities may be related to the physiological function of TF.  相似文献   

15.
Trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone encountered by nascent chains in bacteria, which consists of two modules: peptidyl-prolyl-cis/trans-isomerase (PPIase) domain and a crevice built by both N- and C-terminal domains. While the crevice is suggested to provide a protective space over the peptide exit site of ribosome for nascent polypeptides to fold, it remains unclear whether PPIase domain is directly involved in assisting protein folding. Here, we introduced structural change into different regions of TF, and investigated their influence on the chaperone function of TF in assisting the folding of various substrate proteins, including oligomeric glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and monomeric carbonic anhydrase II (CA II) and lysozyme. Results showed that structural disturbances by site-specific mutations in the PPIase active site or by deletion of the PPIase domain from TF affected the chaperone activity of TF toward CA II and GAPDH but had no effect on TF-assisted lysozyme refolding, suggesting PPIase domain is involved in assisting the folding of substrates larger than lysozyme. Mutants with the structural disturbances in the crevice totally lost the chaperone activity toward all the substrates we used in this investigation. These results provide further evidence to confirm that the crevice is the major chaperone site of TF, and the hydrophobic pocket in PPIase domain acts as an auxiliary site to assist the folding of substrate proteins bound to the crevice in a substrate-dependent manner, which is beneficial for TF to provide appropriate assistance for protein folding by changing protective space and binding affinity.  相似文献   

16.
Trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone to interact with nascent chains and facilitate their folding in bacteria. Escherichia coli TF is 432 residues in length and contains three domains with distinct structural and functional properties. The N-terminal domain of TF is important for ribosome binding, and the M-domain carries the PPIase activity. However, the function of the C-terminal domain remains unclear, and the residues or regions directly involved in substrate binding have not yet been identified. Here, a hydrophobic probe, bis-ANS, was used to characterize potential substrate-binding regions. Results showed that bis-ANS binds TF with a 1:1 stoichiometry and a K(d) of 16 microM, and it can be covalently incorporated into TF by UV-light irradiation. A single bis-ANS-labeled peptide was obtained by tryptic digestion and identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry as Asn391-Lys392. In silico docking analysis identified a single potential binding site for bis-ANS on the TF molecule, which is adjacent to this dipeptide and lies in the pocket formed by the C-terminal arms. The bis-ANS-labeled TF completely lost the ability to assist GAPDH or lysozyme refolding and showed increased protection toward cleavage by alpha-chymotrypsin, suggesting blocking of hydrophobic residues. The C-terminal truncation mutant TF389 also showed no chaperone activity and could not bind bis-ANS. These results suggest that bis-ANS binding may mimic binding of a substrate peptide and that the C-terminal region of TF plays an important role in hydrophobic binding and chaperone function.  相似文献   

17.
Calnexin was initially identified as an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) type I integral membrane protein, phosphorylated on its cytosolic domain by ER-associated protein kinases. Although the role of the ER luminal domain of calnexin has been established as a constituent of the molecular chaperone machinery of the ER, less is known about the role of the cytosolic phosphorylation of calnexin. Analysis by two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps revealed that calnexin was in vitro phosphorylated in isolated microsomes by casein kinase 2 (CK2) and extracellular-signal regulated kinase-1 (ERK-1) at sites corresponding to those for in vivo phosphorylation. In canine pancreatic microsomes, synergistic phosphorylation by CK2 and ERK-1 led to increased association of calnexin with membrane-bound ribosomes. In vivo, calnexin-associated ERK-1 activity was identified by co-immunoprecipitation. This activity was abolished in cells expressing a dominant-negative MEK-1. Activation of ERK-1 in cells by addition of serum led to a 4-fold increase in ribosome-associated calnexin over unstimulated cells. Taken together with studies revealing calnexin association with CK2 and ERK-1, a model is proposed whereby phosphorylation of calnexin leads to a potential increase in glycoprotein folding close to the translocon.  相似文献   

18.
As nascent polypeptides exit ribosomes, they are engaged by a series of processing, targeting, and folding factors. Here, we present a selective ribosome profiling strategy that enables global monitoring of when these factors engage polypeptides in the complex cellular environment. Studies of the Escherichia coli chaperone trigger factor (TF) reveal that, though TF can interact with many polypeptides, β-barrel outer-membrane proteins are the most prominent substrates. Loss of TF leads to broad outer-membrane defects and premature, cotranslational protein translocation. Whereas in vitro studies suggested that TF is prebound to ribosomes waiting for polypeptides to emerge from the exit channel, we find that in vivo TF engages ribosomes only after ~100 amino acids are translated. Moreover, excess TF interferes with cotranslational removal of the N-terminal formyl methionine. Our studies support a triaging model in which proper protein biogenesis relies on the fine-tuned, sequential engagement of processing, targeting, and folding factors.  相似文献   

19.
Ribosome-tethered chaperones that interact with nascent polypeptide chains have been identified in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems. However, these ribosome-associated chaperones share no sequence similarity: bacterial trigger factors (TF) form an independent protein family while the yeast machinery is Hsp70-based. The absence of any component of the yeast machinery results in slow growth at low temperatures and sensitivity to aminoglycoside protein synthesis inhibitors. After establishing that yeast ribosomal protein Rpl25 is able to recruit TF to ribosomes when expressed in place of its Escherichia coli homologue L23, the ribosomal TF tether, we tested whether such divergent ribosome-associated chaperones are functionally interchangeable. E. coli TF was expressed in yeast cells that lacked the endogenous ribosome-bound machinery. TF associated with yeast ribosomes, cross-linked to yeast nascent polypeptides and partially complemented the aminoglycoside sensitivity, demonstrating that ribosome-associated chaperones from divergent organisms share common functions, despite their lack of sequence similarity.  相似文献   

20.
Newly synthesized proteins leave the ribosome through a narrow tunnel in the large subunit. During ongoing synthesis, nascent protein chains are particularly sensitive to aggregation and degradation because they emerge from the ribosome in an unfolded state. In bacteria, the first protein to interact with nascent chains and facilitate their folding is the ribosome-associated chaperone trigger factor. Recently, crystal structures of trigger factor and of its ribosome-binding domain in complex with the large ribosomal subunit revealed that the chaperone adopts an extended 'dragon-shaped' fold with a large hydrophobic cradle, which arches over the exit of the ribosomal tunnel and shields newly synthesized proteins. These structural results, together with recent biochemical data on trigger factor and its interplay with other chaperones and factors that interact with the nascent chain, provide a comprehensive view of the role of trigger factor during co-translational protein folding.  相似文献   

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