The Escherichia coli GroE chaperones assist protein folding under conditions where no spontaneous folding occurs. To achieve this, the cooperation of GroEL and GroES, the two protein components of the chaperone system, is an essential requirement. While in many cases GroE simply suppresses unspecific aggregation of non-native proteins by encapsulation, there are examples where folding is accelerated by GroE. Using maltose-binding protein (MBP) as a substrate for GroE, it had been possible to define basic requirements for catalysis of folding. Here, we have analyzed key steps in the interaction of GroE and the MBP mutant Y283D during catalyzed folding. In addition to high temperature, high ionic strength was shown to be a restrictive condition for MBP Y283D folding. In both cases, the complete GroE system (GroEL, GroES and ATP) compensates the deceleration of MBP Y283D folding. Combining kinetic folding experiments and electron microscopy of GroE particles, we demonstrate that at elevated temperatures, symmetrical GroE particles with GroES bound to both ends of the GroEL cylinder play an important role in the efficient catalysis of MBP Y283D refolding. In principle, MBP Y283D folding can be catalyzed during one encapsulation cycle. However, because the commitment to reach the native state is low after only one cycle of ATP hydrolysis, several interaction cycles are required for catalyzed folding.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.1999.2780 | DOI Listing |
J Mol Biol
June 1999
Institut für Biophysik und Physikalische Biochemie, Universität Regensburg, Regensburg, 93040, Germany.
The Escherichia coli GroE chaperones assist protein folding under conditions where no spontaneous folding occurs. To achieve this, the cooperation of GroEL and GroES, the two protein components of the chaperone system, is an essential requirement. While in many cases GroE simply suppresses unspecific aggregation of non-native proteins by encapsulation, there are examples where folding is accelerated by GroE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
February 1997
Institut für Biophysik & Physikalische Biochemie, Universität Regensburg, Germany.
The GroE chaperones of Escherichia coli assist protein folding under physiological and heat shock conditions in an ATP-dependent way. Although a number of details of assisted folding have been elucidated, the molecular mechanism of the GroE cycle remains unresolved. Here we present an experimental system that allows the direct analysis of the GroE-mediated folding cycle under stringent conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Biol
April 1996
Institut für Biophysik & Physikalische Biochemie, Universität Regensburg, Germany.
Chaperonins are a ubiquitous class of ring-shaped oligomeric protein complexes that are of crucial importance for protein folding in vivo. Analysis of the underlying functional principles had relied mainly on model proteins the (un)folding of which is dominated by irreversible side-reactions. We used maltose-binding protein (MBP) as a substrate protein for GroEL, since the refolding of this protein is completely reversible and thus allows a detailed analysis of the molecular parameters that determine the interaction of GroEL with non-native protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bacteriol
August 1994
Central Research and Development Division, E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Wilmington, Delaware 19880-0328.
Less than 20% of the Escherichia coli maltose-binding protein (MBP) synthesized in Bacillus subtilis is exported. However, a portion of the secreted MBP was processed cotranslationally. Coexpression of SecB, a secretion-related chaperone of E.
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