The Ribosome Cooperates with a Chaperone to Guide Multi-domain Protein Folding

核糖体与分子伴侣协同作用,引导多结构域蛋白质折叠

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作者:Kaixian Liu ,Kevin Maciuba ,Christian M Kaiser

Abstract

Multi-domain proteins, containing several structural units within a single polypeptide, constitute a large fraction of all proteomes. Co-translational folding is assumed to simplify the conformational search problem for large proteins, but the events leading to correctly folded, functional structures remain poorly characterized. Similarly, how the ribosome and molecular chaperones promote efficient folding remains obscure. Using optical tweezers, we have dissected early folding events of nascent elongation factor G, a multi-domain protein that requires chaperones for folding. The ribosome and the chaperone trigger factor reduce inter-domain misfolding, permitting folding of the N-terminal G-domain. Successful completion of this step is a crucial prerequisite for folding of the next domain. Unexpectedly, co-translational folding does not proceed unidirectionally; emerging unfolded polypeptide can denature an already-folded domain. Trigger factor, but not the ribosome, protects against denaturation. The chaperone thus serves a previously unappreciated function, helping multi-domain proteins overcome inherent challenges during co-translational folding. Keywords: elongation factor G; molecular chaperones; multi-domain protein; nascent polypeptide; optical tweezers; protein folding; protein synthesis; ribosome; single-molecule; translation.

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