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1.
Highly conserved molecular chaperone Hsp70 heat shock proteins play a key role in maintaining protein homeostasis (proteostasis). DnaK, a major Hsp70 in Escherichia coli, has been widely used as a paradigm for studying Hsp70s. In the absence of ATP, purified DnaK forms low-ordered oligomer, whereas ATP binding shifts the equilibrium toward the monomer. Recently, we solved the crystal structure of DnaK in complex with ATP. There are two molecules of DnaK-ATP in the asymmetric unit. Interestingly, the interfaces between the two molecules of DnaK are large with good surface complementarity, suggesting functional importance of this crystallographic dimer. Biochemical analyses of DnaK protein supported the formation of dimer in solution. Furthermore, our cross-linking experiment based on the DnaK-ATP structure confirmed that DnaK forms specific dimer in an ATP-dependent manner. To understand the physiological function of the dimer, we mutated five residues on the dimer interface. Four mutations, R56A, T301A, N537A, and D540A, resulted in loss of chaperone activity and compromised the formation of dimer, indicating the functional importance of the dimer. Surprisingly, neither the intrinsic biochemical activities, the ATP-induced allosteric coupling, nor GrpE co-chaperone interaction is affected appreciably in all of the mutations except for R56A. Unexpectedly, the interaction with co-chaperone Hsp40 is significantly compromised. In summary, this study suggests that DnaK forms a transient dimer upon ATP binding, and this dimer is essential for the efficient interaction of DnaK with Hsp40.  相似文献   

2.
Hsp70 family members together with their Hsp40 cochaperones function as molecular chaperones, using an ATP-controlled cycle of polypeptide binding and release to mediate protein folding. Hsp40 plays a key role in the chaperone reaction by stimulating the ATPase activity and activating the substrate binding of Hsp70. We have explored the interaction between the Escherichia coli Hsp70 family member, DnaK, and its cochaperone partner DnaJ. Our data show that the binding of ATP, subsequent conformational changes in DnaK, and DnaJ-stimulated ATP hydrolysis are all required for the formation of a DnaK-DnaJ complex as monitored by Biacore analysis. In addition, our data imply that the interaction of the J-domain with DnaK depends on the substrate binding state of DnaK.  相似文献   

3.
Chesnokova LS  Witt SN 《Biochemistry》2005,44(33):11224-11233
Hsp70 chaperones are heterotropic allosteric systems in which ATP and misfolded or aggregated polypeptides are the activating ligands. To gain insight into the mechanism by which ATP and polypeptides regulate Hsp70 chaperone activity, the effect of a short peptide on the K(M) for ATP was analyzed using the Escherichia coli Hsp70 called DnaK. In the absence of peptide, the K(-P)(M) for ATP is 52 +/- 11 nM, whereas this value jumps to 14.6 +/- 1.6 microM in the presence of saturating peptide. This finding supports a mechanism in which ATP binding drives the chaperone in one direction and peptide binding pushes the chaperone back in the opposite direction (and thus increases K(M)), according to ATP + DnaK.P <==> ATP.DnaK.P <==> ATP.DnaK* + P, where ATP.DnaK.P is an intermediate from which competing ATP hydrolysis occurs (ATP.DnaK.P --> ADP.DnaK.P). We show that this branched mechanism can even explain how DnaK hydrolyzes ATP in the absence of peptide and that the true rate constant for DnaK-mediated ATP hydrolysis (k(hy)) in the absence of peptide may be as high as 0.5 s(-)(1) (rather than 5 x 10(-)(4) s(-)(1) as often stated in the literature). What happens is that a conformational equilibrium outcompetes ATP hydrolysis and effectively reduces the concentration of the intermediate by a factor of a thousand, resulting in the following relation: k(cat) = k(hy)/1000 = 5 x 10(-)(4) s(-)(1). How polypeptide substrates and the co-chaperone DnaJ modulate DnaK to achieve its theoretical maximal rate of ATP hydrolysis, which we suggest is 0.5 s(-)(1), is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The Hsp70 protein switches during its functional cycle from an ADP-bound state with a high affinity for substrates to a low-affinity, ATP-bound state, with concomitant release of the client protein. The rate of the chaperone cycle is regulated by co-chaperones such as nucleotide exchange factors that significantly accelerate the ADP/ATP exchange. Mge1p, a mitochondrial matrix protein with homology to bacterial GrpE, serves as the nucleotide exchange factor of mitochondrial Hsp70. Here, we analyze the influence of temperature on the structure and functional properties of Mge1p from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mge1p is a dimer in solution that undergoes a reversible thermal transition at heat-shock temperatures, i.e. above 37 degrees C, that involves protein unfolding and dimer dissociation. The thermally denatured protein is unable to interact stably with mitochondrial Hsp70, and therefore is unable to regulate its ATPase and chaperone cycle. Crosslinking of wild-type mitochondria reveals that Mge1p undergoes the same dimer to monomer temperature-dependent shift, and that the nucleotide exchange factor does not associate with its Hsp70 partner at stress temperatures (i.e. > or =45 degrees C). Once the stress conditions disappear, Mge1p refolds and recovers both structure and functional properties. Therefore, Mge1p can act as a thermosensor for the mitochondrial Hsp70 system, regulating the nucleotide exchange rates under heat shock, as has been described for two bacterial GrpE proteins. The thermosensor activity is conserved in the GrpE-like nucleotide exchange factors although, as discussed here, it is achieved through a different structural mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
DnaK, an Hsp70 molecular chaperone, processes its substrates in an ATP-driven cycle, which is controlled by the co-chaperones DnaJ and GrpE. The kinetic analysis of substrate binding and release has as yet been limited to fluorescence-labeled peptides. Here, we report a comprehensive kinetic analysis of the chaperone action with protein substrates. The kinetic partitioning of the (ATP x DnaK) x substrate complexes between dissociation and conversion into stable (ADP x DnaK) x substrate complexes is determined by DnaJ. In the case of substrates that allow the formation of ternary (ATP x DnaK) x substrate x DnaJ complexes, the cis-effect of DnaJ markedly accelerates ATP hydrolysis. This triage mechanism efficiently selects from the (ATP x DnaK) x substrate complexes those to be processed in the chaperone cycle; at 45 degrees C, the fraction of protein complexes fed into the cycle is 20 times higher than that of peptide complexes. The thermosensor effect of the ADP/ATP exchange factor GrpE retards the release of substrate from the cycle at higher temperatures; the fraction of total DnaK in stable (ADP x DnaK) x substrate complexes is 2 times higher at 45 degrees C than at 25 degrees C. Monitoring the cellular situation by DnaJ as nonnative protein sensor and GrpE as thermosensor thus directly adapts the operational mode of the DnaK system to heat shock conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Hsp70 chaperones keep protein homeostasis facilitating the response of organisms to changes in external and internal conditions. Hsp70s have two domains—nucleotide binding domain (NBD) and substrate binding domain (SBD)—connected by a conserved hydrophobic linker. Functioning of Hsp70s depend on tightly regulated cycles of ATP hydrolysis allosterically coupled, often together with cochaperones, to the binding/release of peptide substrates. Here we describe the crystal structure of the Mycoplasma genitalium DnaK (MgDnaK) protein, an Hsp70 homolog, in the noncompact, nucleotide‐bound/substrate‐bound conformation. The MgDnaK structure resembles the one from the thermophilic eubacteria DnaK trapped in the same state. However, in MgDnaK the NBD and SBD domains remain close to each other despite the lack of direct interaction between them and with the linker contacting the two subdomains of SBD. These observations suggest that the structures might represent an intermediate of the protein where the conserved linker binds to the SBD to favor the noncompact state of the protein by stabilizing the SBDβ‐SBDα subdomains interaction, promoting the capacity of the protein to sample different conformations, which is critical for proper functioning of the molecular chaperone allosteric mechanism. Comparison of the solved structures indicates that the NBD remains essentially invariant in presence or absence of nucleotide.  相似文献   

7.
Central to the chaperone function of Hsp70 stress proteins including Escherichia coli DnaK is the ability of Hsp70 to bind unfolded protein substrates in an ATP-dependent manner. Mg2+/ATP dissociates bound substrates and, furthermore, substrate binding stimulates the ATPase of Hsp70. This coupling is proposed to require a glutamate residue, E175 of bovine Hsc70, that is entirely conserved within the Hsp70 family, as it contacts bound Mg2+/ATP and is part of a hinge required for a postulated ATP-dependent opening/closing movement of the nucleotide binding cleft which then triggers substrate release. We analyzed the effects of dnaK mutations which alter the corresponding glutamate-171 of DnaK to alanine, leucine or lysine. In vivo, the mutated dnaK alleles failed to complement the delta dnaK52 mutation and were dominant negative in dnaK+ cells. In vitro, all three mutant DnaK proteins were inactive in known DnaK-dependent reactions, including refolding of denatured luciferase and initiation of lambda DNA replication. The mutant proteins retained ATPase activity, as well as the capacity to bind peptide substrates. The intrinsic ATPase activities of the mutant proteins, however, did exhibit increased Km and Vmax values. More importantly, these mutant proteins showed no stimulation of ATPase activity by substrates and no substrate dissociation by Mg2+/ATP. Thus, glutamate-171 is required for coupling of ATPase activity with substrate binding, and this coupling is essential for the chaperone function of DnaK.  相似文献   

8.
Hsp70 chaperones assist protein folding through ATP-regulated transient association with substrates. Substrate binding by Hsp70 is controlled by DnaJ co-chaperones which stimulate Hsp70 to hydrolyze ATP and, consequently, to close its substrate binding cavity allowing trapping of substrates. We analyzed the interaction of the Escherichia coli Hsp70 homologue, DnaK, with DnaJ using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy. Resonance signals of complex kinetic characteristics were detected when DnaK was passed over a sensor chip with coupled DnaJ. This interaction was specific as it was not detected with a functionally defective DnaJ mutant protein, DnaJ259, that carries a mutation in the HPD signature motif of the conserved J-domain. Detectable DnaK-DnaJ interaction required ATP hydrolysis by DnaK and was competitively inhibited by chaperone substrates of DnaK. For DnaK mutant proteins with amino acid substitutions in the substrate binding cavity that affect substrate binding, the strength of detected interaction with DnaJ decreased proportionally with increased strength of the substrate binding defects. These findings indicate that the detected response signals resulted from DnaJ and ATP hydrolysis-dependent association of DnaJ as substrate for DnaK. Although not considered as physiologically relevant, this association allowed us to experimentally unravel the mechanism of DnaJ action. Accordingly, DnaJ stimulates ATP hydrolysis only after association of a substrate with the substrate binding cavity of DnaK. Further analysis revealed that this coupling mechanism required the J-domain of DnaJ and was also functional for natural DnaK substrates, and thus is central to the mechanism of action of the DnaK chaperone system.  相似文献   

9.
ATP regulates the function of many proteins in the cell by transducing its binding and hydrolysis energies into protein conformational changes by mechanisms which are challenging to identify at the atomic scale. Based on molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, a method is proposed to analyze the structural changes induced by ATP binding to a protein by computing the effective free-energy landscape (FEL) of a subset of its coordinates along its amino-acid sequence. The method is applied to characterize the mechanism by which the binding of ATP to the nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) of Hsp70 propagates a signal to its substrate-binding domain (SBD). Unbiased MD simulations were performed for Hsp70-DnaK chaperone in nucleotide-free, ADP-bound and ATP-bound states. The simulations revealed that the SBD does not interact with the NBD for DnaK in its nucleotide-free and ADP-bound states whereas the docking of the SBD was found in the ATP-bound state. The docked state induced by ATP binding found in MD is an intermediate state between the initial nucleotide-free and final ATP-bound states of Hsp70. The analysis of the FEL projected along the amino-acid sequence permitted to identify a subset of 27 protein internal coordinates corresponding to a network of 91 key residues involved in the conformational change induced by ATP binding. Among the 91 residues, 26 are identified for the first time, whereas the others were shown relevant for the allosteric communication of Hsp70 s in several experiments and bioinformatics analysis. The FEL analysis revealed also the origin of the ATP-induced structural modifications of the SBD recently measured by Electron Paramagnetic Resonance. The pathway between the nucleotide-free and the intermediate state of DnaK was extracted by applying principal component analysis to the subset of internal coordinates describing the transition. The methodology proposed is general and could be applied to analyze allosteric communication in other proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Most, if not all, of the cellular functions of Hsp70 proteins require the assistance of a DnaJ homologue, which accelerates the weak intrinsic ATPase activity of Hsp70 and serves as a specificity factor by binding and targeting specific polypeptide substrates for Hsp70 action. We have used pre-steady-state kinetics to investigate the interaction of the Escherichia coli DnaJ and DnaK proteins, and the effects of DnaJ on the ATPase reaction of DnaK. DnaJ accelerates hydrolysis of ATP by DnaK to such an extent that ATP binding by DnaK becomes rate-limiting for hydrolysis. At high concentrations of DnaK under single-turnover conditions, the rate-limiting step is a first-order process, apparently a change of DnaK conformation, that accompanies ATP binding and proceeds at 12-15 min-1 at 25 degrees C and 1-1.5 min-1 at 5 degrees C. By prebinding ATP to DnaK and subsequently adding DnaJ, the effects of this slow step may be bypassed, and the maximal rate-enhancement of DnaJ on the hydrolysis step is approximately 15 000-fold at 5 degrees C. The interaction of DnaJ with DnaK.ATP is likely a rapid equilibrium relative to ATP hydrolysis, and is relatively weak, with a KD of approximately 20 microM at 5 degrees C, and weaker still at 25 degrees C. In the presence of saturating DnaJ, the maximal rate of ATP hydrolysis by DnaK is similar to previously reported rates for peptide release from DnaK.ATP. This suggests that when DnaK encounters a DnaJ-bound polypeptide or protein complex, a significant fraction of such events result in ATP hydrolysis by DnaK and concomitant capture of the polypeptide substrate in a tight complex with DnaK.ADP. Furthermore, a broadly applicable kinetic mechanism for DnaJ-mediated specificity of Hsp70 action arises from these observations, in which the specificity arises largely from the acceleration of the hydrolysis step itself, rather than by DnaJ-dependent modulation of the affinity of Hsp70 for substrate polypeptides.  相似文献   

11.
Hsp70 chaperones comprise two domains, the nucleotide-binding domain (Hsp70NBD), responsible for structural and functional changes in the chaperone, and the substrate-binding domain (Hsp70SBD), involved in substrate interaction. Substrate binding and release in Hsp70 is controlled by the nucleotide state of DnaKNBD, with ATP inducing the open, substrate-receptive DnaKSBD conformation, whereas ADP forces its closure. DnaK cycles between the two conformations through interaction with two cofactors, the Hsp40 co-chaperones (DnaJ in Escherichia coli) induce the ADP state, and the nucleotide exchange factors (GrpE in E. coli) induce the ATP state. X-ray crystallography showed that the GrpE dimer is a nucleotide exchange factor that works by interaction of one of its monomers with DnaKNBD. DnaKSBD location in this complex is debated; there is evidence that it interacts with the GrpE N-terminal disordered region, far from DnaKNBD. Although we confirmed this interaction using biochemical and biophysical techniques, our EM-based three-dimensional reconstruction of the DnaK-GrpE complex located DnaKSBD near DnaKNBD. This apparent discrepancy between the functional and structural results is explained by our finding that the tail region of the GrpE dimer in the DnaK-GrpE complex bends and its tip contacts DnaKSBD, whereas the DnaKNBD-DnaKSBD linker contacts the GrpE helical region. We suggest that these interactions define a more complex role for GrpE in the control of DnaK function.  相似文献   

12.
Hsp40 chaperones bind and transfer substrate proteins to Hsp70s and regulate their ATPase activity. The interaction of Hsp40s with native proteins modifies their structure and function. A good model for this function is DnaJ, the bacterial Hsp40 that interacts with RepE, the repressor/activator of plasmid F replication, and together with DnaK regulates its function. We characterize here the structure of the DnaJ-RepE complex by electron microscopy, the first described structure of a complex between an Hsp40 and a client protein. The comparison of the complexes of DnaJ with two RepE mutants reveals an intrinsic plasticity of the DnaJ dimer that allows the chaperone to adapt to different substrates. We also show that DnaJ induces conformational changes in dimeric RepE, which increase the intermonomeric distance and remodel both RepE domains enhancing its affinity for DNA.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND: Molecular chaperone Hsp40 can bind non-native polypeptide and facilitate Hsp70 in protein refolding. How Hsp40 and other chaperones distinguish between the folded and unfolded states of proteins to bind nonnative polypeptides is a fundamental issue. RESULTS: To investigate this mechanism, we determined the crystal structure of the peptide-binding fragment of Sis1, an essential member of the Hsp40 family from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The 2.7 A structure reveals that Sis1 forms a homodimer in the crystal by a crystallographic twofold axis. Sis1 monomers are elongated and consist of two domains with similar folds. Sis1 dimerizes through a short C-terminal stretch. The Sis1 dimer has a U-shaped architecture and a large cleft is formed between the two elongated monomers. Domain I in each monomer contains a hydrophobic depression that might be involved in binding the sidechains of hydrophobic amino acids. CONCLUSIONS: Sis1 (1-337), which lacks the dimerization motif, exhibited severe defects in chaperone activity, but could regulate Hsp70 ATPase activity. Thus, dimer formation is critical for Sis1 chaperone function. We propose that the Sis1 cleft functions as a docking site for the Hsp70 peptide-binding domain and that Sis1-Hsp70 interaction serves to facilitate the efficient transfer of peptides from Sis1 to Hsp70.  相似文献   

14.
The Hsp70 chaperone activity in protein folding is regulated by ATP-controlled cycles of substrate binding and release. Nucleotide exchange plays a key role in these cycles by triggering substrate release. Structural searches of Hsp70 homologs revealed three structural elements within the ATPase domain: two salt bridges and an exposed loop. Mutational analysis showed that these elements control the dissociation of nucleotides, the interaction with exchange factors and chaperone activity. Sequence variations in the three elements classify the Hsp70 family members into three subfamilies, DnaK proteins, HscA proteins and Hsc70 proteins. These subfamilies show strong differences in nucleotide dissociation and interaction with the exchange factors GrpE and Bag-1.  相似文献   

15.
The ubiquitous molecular chaperone 70-kDa heat shock proteins (Hsp70) play key roles in maintaining protein homeostasis. Hsp70s contain two functional domains: a nucleotide binding domain and a substrate binding domain. The two domains are connected by a highly conserved inter-domain linker, and allosteric coupling between the two domains is critical for chaperone function. The auxiliary chaperone 40-kDa heat shock proteins (Hsp40) facilitate all the biological processes associated with Hsp70s by stimulating the ATPase activity of Hsp70s. Although an overall essential role of the inter-domain linker in both allosteric coupling and Hsp40 interaction has been suggested, the molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. Previously, we reported a crystal structure of a full-length Hsp70 homolog, in which the inter-domain linker forms a well-ordered β strand. Four highly conserved hydrophobic residues reside on the inter-domain linker. In DnaK, a well-studied Hsp70, these residues are V389, L390, L391, and L392. In this study, we biochemically dissected their roles. The inward-facing side chains of V389 and L391 form extensive hydrophobic contacts with the nucleotide binding domain, suggesting their essential roles in coupling the two functional domains, a hypothesis confirmed by mutational analysis. On the other hand, L390 and L392 face outward on the surface. Mutation of either abolishes DnaK's in vivo function, yet intrinsic biochemical properties remain largely intact. In contrast, Hsp40 interaction is severely compromised. Thus, for the first time, we separated the two essential roles of the highly conserved Hsp70 inter-domain linker: coupling the two functional domains through V389 and L391 and mediating the interaction with Hsp40 through L390 and L392.  相似文献   

16.
To perform effectively as a molecular chaperone, DnaK (Hsp70) necessitates the assistance of its DnaJ (Hsp40) co-chaperone partner, which efficiently stimulates its intrinsically weak ATPase activity and facilitates its interaction with polypeptide substrates. In this study, we address the function of the conserved glycine- and phenylalanine-rich (G/F-rich) region of the Escherichia coli DnaJ in the DnaK chaperone cycle. We show that the G/F-rich region is critical for DnaJ co-chaperone functions in vivo and that despite a significant degree of sequence conservation among the G/F-rich regions of Hsp40 homologs from bacteria, yeast, or humans, functional complementation in the context of the E. coli DnaJ is limited. Furthermore, we found that the deletion of the whole G/F-rich region is mirrored by mutations in the conserved Asp-Ile/Val-Phe (DIF) motif contained in this region. Further genetic and biochemical analyses revealed that this amino acid triplet plays a critical role in regulation of the DnaK chaperone cycle, possibly by modulating a crucial step subsequent to DnaK-mediated ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
In the DnaK (Hsp70) molecular chaperone system of Escherichia coli, the substrate polypeptide is fed into the chaperone cycle by association with the fast-binding, ATP-liganded form of the DnaK. The substrate binding properties of DnaK are controlled by its two cochaperones DnaJ (Hsp40) and GrpE. DnaJ stimulates the hydrolysis of DnaK-bound ATP, and GrpE accelerates ADP/ATP exchange. DnaJ has been described as targeting the substrate to DnaK, a concept that has remained rather obscure. Based on binding experiments with peptides and polypeptides we propose here a novel mechanism for the targeting action of DnaJ: ATP.DnaK and DnaJ with its substrate-binding domain bind to different segments of one and the same polypeptide chain forming (ATP.DnaK)m.substrate.DnaJn complexes; in these ternary complexes efficient cis-interaction of the J-domain of DnaJ with DnaK is favored by their propinquity and triggers the hydrolysis of DnaK-bound ATP, converting DnaK to its ADP-liganded high affinity state and thus locking it onto the substrate polypeptide.  相似文献   

19.
The C-terminal, polypeptide binding domain of the 70-kDa molecular chaperone DnaK is composed of a unique lidlike subdomain that appears to hinder steric access to the peptide binding site. We have expressed, purified, and characterized a lidless form of DnaK to test the influence of the lid on the ATPase activity, on interdomain communication, and on the kinetics of peptide binding. The principal findings are that loss of the lid creates an activated form of DnaK which is not equivalent to ATP-bound DnaK. For example, at 25 degrees C the NR peptide (NRLLLTG) dissociates from the ADP and ATP states of DnaK with observed off-rate constants of 0.001 and 4.8 s(-1), respectively. In contrast, for DnaK that lacks most of the helical lid, residues 518-638, the NR peptide dissociates with observed off-rate constants of 0.1 and 188 s(-1). These results show that the loss of the lid does not interfere with interdomain communication, that the beta-sandwich peptide binding domain can exist in two discrete conformations, and that the lid functions to increase the lifetime of a DnaK.peptide complex. We discuss several mechanisms to explain how the lid affects the lifetime of a DnaK.peptide complex.  相似文献   

20.
The Escherichia coli Hsp40 DnaJ uses its J-domain to target substrate polypeptides for binding to the Hsp70 DnaK, but the mechanism of J-domain function has been obscured by a substrate-like interaction between DnaJ and DnaK. ATP hydrolysis in DnaK is associated with a conformational change that captures the substrate, and both DnaJ and substrate can stimulate ATP hydrolysis. However, substrates cannot trigger capture by DnaK in the presence of ATP, and substrates stimulate a DnaK conformational change that is uncoupled from ATP hydrolysis. The role of the J-domain was examined using the fluorescent derivative of a fusion protein composed of the J-domain and a DnaK-binding peptide. In the absence of ATP, DnaK-binding affinity of the fusion protein is similar to that of the unfused peptide. However, in the presence of ATP, the affinity of the fusion protein is dramatically increased, which is opposite to the decrease in DnaK affinity typically exhibited by peptides. Binding of a fusion protein that contains a defective J-domain is insensitive to ATP. According to results from isothermal titration calorimetry, the J-domain binds to the DnaK ATPase domain with weak affinity (K(D) = 23 microM at 20 degrees C). The interaction is characterized by a positive enthalpy, small heat capacity change (DeltaC(p)= -33 kcal mol(-1)), and increasing binding affinity for increasing temperatures in the physiological range. In conditions that support binding of the J-domain to the ATPase domain, the J-domain accelerates ATP hydrolysis and a simultaneous conformational change in DnaK that is associated with peptide capture. The defective J-domain is inactive, despite the fact that it binds to the DnaK ATPase domain with higher than wild-type affinity. The results are most consistent with an allosteric mechanism of J-domain action in which the J-domain couples ATP hydrolysis to peptide capture by accelerating ATP hydrolysis and delaying DnaK closure until ATP is hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

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