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    J Mol Biol. 2006 Jan 27;355(4):809-20. Epub 2005 Nov 8.

    Effect of hsp70 chaperone on the folding and misfolding of polypeptides modeling an elongating protein chain.

    Kurt N, Rajagopalan S, Cavagnero S.

    Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1101 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706, USA.

    Virtually nothing is known about the interaction of co-translationally active chaperones with nascent polypeptides and the resulting effects on peptide conformation and folding. We have explored this issue by NMR analysis of apomyoglobin N-terminal fragments of increasing length, taken as models for different stages of protein biosynthesis, in the absence and presence of the substrate binding domain of Escherichia coli Hsp70, DnaK-beta. The incomplete polypeptides misfold and self-associate under refolding conditions. In the presence of DnaK-beta, however, formation of the original self-associated species is completely or partially prevented. Chaperone interaction with incomplete protein chains promotes a globally unfolded dynamic DnaK-beta-bound state, which becomes folding-competent only upon incorporation of the residues corresponding to the C-terminal H helix. The chaperone does not bind the full-length protein at equilibrium. However, its presence strongly disfavors the kinetic accessibility of misfolding side-routes available to the full-length chain. This work supports the role of DnaK as a "holder" for incomplete N-terminal polypeptides. However, as the chain approaches its full-length status, the tendency to intramolecularly bury non-polar surface efficiently outcompetes chaperone binding. Under these conditions, DnaK serves as a "folding enhancer" by supporting folding of a population of otherwise folding-incompetent full-length protein chains.

    PMID: 16309705 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 1570398

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