Mechanism of chaperone coordination during cotranslational protein folding in bacteria
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Protein folding is assisted by molecular chaperones that bind nascent polypeptides during mRNA translation. Several structurally-distinct classes of chaperone promote de novo folding, suggesting that their activities are coordinated at the ribosome. We used biochemical reconstitution and structural proteomics to explore the molecular basis for cotranslational chaperone action in bacteria. We found that chaperone binding is disfavoured close to the ribosome, allowing folding to precede chaperone recruitment. Trigger factor recognises compact folding intermediates exposing extensive unfolded surface and dictates DnaJ access to nascent chains. DnaJ uses a large surface to bind structurally diverse intermediates, and recruits DnaK to sequence-diverse solvent-accessible sites. Neither Trigger factor, DnaJ nor DnaK destabilize cotranslational folding intermediates. Instead, the chaperones collaborate to protect incipient structure in the nascent polypeptide well beyond the ribosome exit tunnel. Our findings show how the chaperone network selects and modulates cotranslational folding intermediates.
INSTRUMENT(S): Orbitrap Eclipse
ORGANISM(S): Escherichia Coli
SUBMITTER: Alzbeta Roeselova
LAB HEAD: David Balchin
PROVIDER: PXD048623 | Pride | 2024-07-03
REPOSITORIES: Pride
ACCESS DATA