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1.
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   

2.
The role of ribosome-binding molecular chaperones in protein folding is not yet well understood. Trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone to interact with nascent polypeptides as they emerge from the bacterial ribosome. It binds to the ribosome as a monomer but forms dimers in free solution. Based on recent crystal structures, TF has an elongated shape, with the peptidyl-prolyl-cis/trans-isomerase (PPIase) domain and the N-terminal ribosome binding domain positioned at opposite ends of the molecule and the C-terminal domain, which forms two arms, positioned in between. By using site specifically labeled TF proteins, we have demonstrated that all three domains of TF interact with nascent chains during translation. Interactions with the PPIase domain were length-dependent but independent of PPIase activity. Interestingly, with free TF, these same sites were found to be involved in forming the dimer interface, suggesting that dimerization partially occludes TF-nascent chain binding sites. Our data indicate the existence of two regions on TF along which nascent chains can interact, the NC-domains as the main site and the PPIase domain as an auxiliary site.  相似文献   

3.
Recombinant expression of eukaryotic proteins in bacteria often results in misfolding and aggregation. The ribosome-binding Trigger factor (TF) is the first molecular chaperone that interacts with nascent polypeptide chains in bacteria. Here we show that mutant TF lacking the PPIase domain (TFNC) is more efficient than wild-type TF in enhancing the folding yield of multi-domain proteins such as firefly luciferase. We find that TFNC has a shorter residence time on nascent chains, thus facilitating co-translational folding. By delaying folding relative to translation, the PPIase domain may increase the propensity of misfolding for certain eukaryotic proteins that rely on a mechanism of co-translational, domain-wise folding.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone encountered by the nascent chain in bacteria and forms a stoichiometric complex with the ribosome. However, the functional significance of the high cytosolic concentration of uncomplexed TF, the majority of which is dimeric, is unknown. To gain insight into TF function, we investigated the TF concentration dependence of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) reactivation yield in the presence and absence of the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone system in vitro. Cross-linking results indicate that the observed decrease in the reactivation yield of GAPDH at high concentrations of TF is due to the formation of a stable complex between TF dimer and GAPDH intermediates. In the absence of TF, or at low TF concentrations, the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone system had negligible effect on the GAPDH refolding yield. However, GAPDH intermediates bound and held by dimeric TF could be specifically rescued by the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone system in an ATP-dependent manner. This indicates the potential of TF, in its dimeric form, to act as a binding chaperone, maintaining non-native proteins in a refolding competent conformation and cooperating with downstream molecular chaperones to facilitate post-translational or post-stress protein folding.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
Peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerases (PPIases) catalyze the isomerization of prolyl peptide bonds. Distinct families of this class of enzymes are involved in protein folding in vitro, whereas their significance in free living organisms is not known. Previously, we inspected the smallest known genome of a self-replicating organism and found that Mycoplasma genitalium is devoid of all known PPIases except the trigger factor. Despite the extensive sequence information becoming available, most genes remain hypothetical and enzyme activities in many species have not been assigned to an open reading frame. Therefore, we studied the PPIase activity in crude extracts of M. genitalium. We showed that this is solely attributed to a single enzyme activity, the trigger factor. Characterization of this enzyme revealed that its PPIase activity resides in a central 12-kDa domain. Only the complete trigger factor is able to cis/trans isomerize extended peptide substrates, while the PPIase domain alone can not. The N- and the C-terminal domains of the trigger factor seem to function in binding of proteins as substrates, as demonstrated by protein refolding experiments, in which the complete trigger factor catalyzed protein refolding towards a model protein 500-fold more efficiently than the isolated central PPIase domain. Protein modeling studies suggest that the PPIase domain can fold in a similar way as the PPIase domain of FK506 binding proteins (FKBPs), one class of PPIases, despite only very limited sequence homology. Differences at the active site explain why this enzyme is not inhibited by FK506 in contrast with FKBPs. Trigger factor expressed in Escherichia coli confirms its additional chaperone functions, as shown by its association with chaperones GroEL and GroES after induction of misfolding. In contrast, the isolated PPIase-domain lacks any association with chaperones from E. coli. In summary, trigger factor of M. genitalium is the single folding isomerase of this organism, which harbors an enzymatically active PPIase domain with structural homology to FKBPs. Its additional domains confer its ability to be an efficient catalyst of protein folding. The protein folding machinery is conserved and shows a dual function as a chaperone and a prolyl isomerase.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
In Escherichia coli, protein folding is undertaken by three distinct sets of chaperones, the DnaK-DnaJ and GroEL-GroES systems and the trigger factor (TF). TF has been proposed to be the first chaperone to interact with the nascent polypeptide chain as it emerges from the tunnel of the 70S ribosome and thus probably plays an important role in co-translational protein folding. We have made complexes with deuterated ribosomes (50S subunits and 70S ribosomes) and protated TF and determined the TF binding site on the respective complexes using the neutron scattering technique of spin-contrast variation. Our data suggest that the TF binds in the form of a homodimer. On both the 50S subunit and the 70S ribosome, the TF position is in proximity to the tunnel exit site, near ribosomal proteins L23 and L29, located on the back of the 50S subunit. The positions deviate from one another, such that the position on the 70S ribosome is located slightly further from the tunnel than that determined for the 50S subunit alone. Nevertheless, from both determined positions interaction between TF and a short nascent chain of 57 amino acid residues would be plausible, compatible with a role for TF participation in co-translational protein folding.  相似文献   

11.
Trigger factor (TF) is a ribosome-bound protein that combines catalysis of peptidyl-prolyl isomerization and chaperone-like activities in Escherichia coli. TF was shown to cooperate with the DnaK (Hsp70) chaperone machinery in the folding of newly synthesized proteins, and the double deletion of the corresponding genes (tig and dnaK) exhibited synthetic lethality. We used a detailed genetic approach to characterize various aspects of this functional cooperation in vivo. Surprisingly, we showed that under specific growth conditions, one can delete both dnaK and tig, indicating that bacterial survival can be maintained in the absence of these two major cytosolic chaperones. The strain lacking both DnaK and TF exhibits a very narrow temperature range of growth and a high level of aggregated proteins when compared to either of the single mutants. We found that, in the absence of DnaK, both the N-terminal ribosome-binding domain and the C-terminal domain of unknown function are essential for TF chaperone activity. In contrast, the central PPIase domain is dispensable. Taken together, our data indicate that under certain conditions, folding of newly synthesized proteins in E. coli is not totally dependent on an interaction with either TF and/or DnaK, and suggest that additional chaperones may be involved in this essential process.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
Trigger factor (TF) is the first molecular chaperone interacting cotranslationally with virtually all nascent polypeptides synthesized by the ribosome in bacteria. Thermal adaptation of chaperone function was investigated in TFs from the Antarctic psychrophile Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis, the mesophile Escherichia coli and the hyperthermophile Thermotoga maritima. This series covers nearly all temperatures encountered by bacteria. Although structurally homologous, these TFs display strikingly distinct properties that are related to the bacterial environmental temperature. The hyperthermophilic TF strongly binds model proteins during their folding and protects them from heat‐induced misfolding and aggregation. It decreases the folding rate and counteracts the fast folding rate imposed by high temperature. It also functions as a carrier of partially folded proteins for delivery to downstream chaperones ensuring final maturation. By contrast, the psychrophilic TF displays weak chaperone activities, showing that these functions are less important in cold conditions because protein folding, misfolding and aggregation are slowed down at low temperature. It efficiently catalyses prolyl isomerization at low temperature as a result of its increased cellular concentration rather than from an improved activity. Some chaperone properties of the mesophilic TF possibly reflect its function as a cold shock protein in E. coli.  相似文献   

17.
The SurA protein facilitates correct folding of outer membrane proteins in gram-negative bacteria. The sequence of Escherichia coli SurA presents four segments, two of which are peptidyl-prolyl isomerases (PPIases); the crystal structure reveals an asymmetric dumbbell, in which the amino-terminal, carboxy-terminal, and first PPIase segments of the sequence form a core structural module, and the second PPIase segment is a satellite domain tethered approximately 30 A from this module. The core module, which is implicated in membrane protein folding, has a novel fold that includes an extended crevice. Crystal contacts show that peptides bind within the crevice, suggesting a model for chaperone activity whereby segments of polypeptide may be repetitively sequestered and released during the membrane protein-folding process.  相似文献   

18.
Trigger Factor (TF) is the first chaperone that interacts with nascent chains of cytosolic proteins in Escherichia coli. Although its chaperone activity requires association with ribosomes, TF is present in vivo in a 2-3 fold molar excess over ribosomes and a fraction of it is not ribosome-associated after cell lysis. Here we show that TF follows a three-state equilibrium. Size exclusion chromatography, crosslinking and analytical ultracentrifugation revealed that uncomplexed TF dimerizes with an apparent Kd of 18 microM. Dimerization is mediated by the N-terminal ribosome binding domain and the C-terminal domain of TF, whereas the central peptidyl prolyl isomerase (PPlase) and substrate binding domain does not contribute to dimerization. Crosslinking experiments showed that TF is monomeric in its ribosome-associated state. Quantitative analysis of TF binding to ribosomes revealed a dissociation constant for the TF-ribosome complex of approximately 1.2 microM. From these data we estimate that in vivo most of the ribosomes are in complex with monomeric TF. Uncomplexed TF, however, is in a monomer-dimer equilibrium with approximately two thirds of TF existing in a dimeric state.  相似文献   

19.
As newly synthesized polypeptides emerge from the ribosome, they interact with chaperones and targeting factors that assist in folding and targeting to the proper location in the cell. In Escherichia coli, the chaperone trigger factor (TF) binds to nascent polypeptides early in biosynthesis facilitated by its affinity for the ribosomal proteins L23 and L29 that are situated around the nascent chain exit site on the ribosome. The targeting factor signal recognition particle (SRP) interacts specifically with the signal anchor (SA) sequence in nascent inner membrane proteins (IMPs). Here, we have used photocross-linking to map interactions of the SA sequence in a short, in vitro-synthesized, nascent IMP. Both TF and SRP were found to interact with the SA with partially overlapping binding specificity. In addition, extensive contacts with L23 and L29 were detected. Both purified TF and SRP could be cross-linked to L23 on nontranslating ribosomes with a competitive advantage for SRP. The results suggest a role for L23 in the targeting of IMPs as an attachment site for TF and SRP that is close to the emerging nascent chain.  相似文献   

20.
Spontaneous refolding of GdnHCl denatured bovine carbonic anhydrase II (BCA II) shows at least three phases: a burst phase, a fast phase, and a slow phase. The fast and slow phases are both controlled by proline isomerization. However, we find that in trigger factor (TF)-assisted BCA II folding, only the fast phase is catalyzed by wild-type TF, suggesting that certain proline residues are accessible in folding intermediates. The refolding yields of BCA II assisted by wild-type TF and TF mutants which lack PPIase activity are about the same, which provides further experimental evidence that the PPIase and chaperone activities of TF are independent. The binding of TF to folding intermediates during BCA II refolding was characterized by chemical crosslinking and Western blotting. A scheme for TF-assisted BCA II folding is proposed and the possible role of the TF dimer as a "binding" chaperone in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

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