The journey by which proteins navigate their energy landscapes to their native structures is complex, involving (and sometimes requiring) many cellular factors and processes operating in partnership with a given polypeptide chain’s intrinsic energy landscape. The cytosolic environment and its complement of chaperones play critical roles in granting many proteins safe passage to their native states; however, it is challenging to interrogate the folding process for large numbers of proteins in a complex background with most biophysical techniques. Hence, most chaperone-assisted protein refolding studies are conducted in defined buffers on single purified clients. Here, we develop a limited proteolysis–mass spectrometry approach paired with an isotope-labeling strategy to globally monitor the structures of refolding Escherichia coli proteins in the cytosolic medium and with the chaperones, GroEL/ES (Hsp60) and DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE (Hsp70/40). GroEL can refold the majority (85%) of the E. coli proteins for which we have data and is particularly important for restoring acidic proteins and proteins with high molecular weight, trends that come to light because our assay measures the structural outcome of the refolding process itself, rather than binding or aggregation. For the most part, DnaK and GroEL refold a similar set of proteins, supporting the view that despite their vastly different structures, these two chaperones unfold misfolded states, as one mechanism in common. Finally, we identify a cohort of proteins that are intransigent to being refolded with either chaperone. We suggest that these proteins may fold most efficiently cotranslationally, and then remain kinetically trapped in their native conformations.
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Distribution and solvent exposure of Hsp70 chaperone binding sites across the Escherichia coli proteome
Abstract Many proteins must interact with molecular chaperones to achieve their native state in the cell. Yet, how chaperone binding‐site characteristics affect the folding process is poorly understood. The ubiquitous Hsp70 chaperone system prevents client‐protein aggregation by holding unfolded conformations and by unfolding misfolded states. Hsp70 binding sites of client proteins comprise a nonpolar core surrounded by positively charged residues. However, a detailed analysis of Hsp70 binding sites on a proteome‐wide scale is still lacking. Further, it is not known whether proteins undergo some degree of folding while chaperone bound. Here, we begin to address the above questions by identifying Hsp70 binding sites in 2258Escherichia coli(E. coli) proteins. We find that most proteins bear at least one Hsp70 binding site and that the number of Hsp70 binding sites is directly proportional to protein size. Aggregation propensity upon release from the ribosome correlates with number of Hsp70 binding sites only in the case of large proteins. Interestingly, Hsp70 binding sites are more solvent‐exposed than other nonpolar sites, in protein native states. Our findings show that the majority ofE. coliproteins are systematically enabled to interact with Hsp70 even if this interaction only takes place during a fraction of the protein lifetime. In addition, our data suggest that some conformational sampling may take place within Hsp70‐bound states, due to the solvent exposure of some chaperone binding sites in native proteins. In all, we propose that Hsp70‐chaperone‐binding traits have evolved to favor Hsp70‐assisted protein folding devoid of aggregation.
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- PAR ID:
- 10419862
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics
- Volume:
- 91
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 0887-3585
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- p. 665-678
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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