The relation between co- and post-translational protein folding and aggregation in the cell is poorly understood. Here, we employ a combination of fluorescence anisotropy decays in the frequency domain, fluorescence-detected solubility assays, and NMR spectroscopy to explore the role of the ribosome in protein folding within a biologically relevant context. First, we find that a primary function of the ribosome is to promote cotranslational nascent-protein solubility, thus supporting cotranslational folding even in the absence of molecular chaperones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe heat-shock factor Hsp70 and other molecular chaperones play a central role in nascent protein folding. Elucidating the task performed by individual chaperones within the complex cellular milieu, however, has been challenging. One strategy for addressing this goal has been to monitor protein biogenesis in the absence and presence of inhibitors of a specific chaperone, followed by analysis of folding outcomes under both conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnfinsen's thermodynamic hypothesis does not explicitly take into account the possibility of protein aggregation. Here, we introduce a cyclic-perturbation approach to prove that not only the native state but also soluble aggregates of most proteins can be highly populated under mild, physiologically relevant conditions, even at very low concentration. Surprisingly, these aggregates are not necessarily amyloid in nature and are usually not observed in bioactive proteins due to the extremely low kinetic flux from the native state toward a region of the chemical-potential landscape encoding aggregates.
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