1 / 14

Protein folding & Chaperones

Protein folding & Chaperones. Characteristics of Folded State. Tight packing – compact Sequence determined/environment modulated Families and symmetry Each sequence  unique structure Native state is thermodynamically stable Lowest energy. Physics of Folding. Entropy drives towards this

Télécharger la présentation

Protein folding & Chaperones

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Protein folding & Chaperones

  2. Characteristics of Folded State • Tight packing – compact • Sequence determined/environment modulated • Families and symmetry • Each sequence  unique structure • Native state is thermodynamically stable • Lowest energy

  3. Physics of Folding • Entropy drives towards this • HB exposed • Enthalpy drives towards this • HB interactions • H bonding • Ionic interactions Free Energy is the Difference • Folded state is more stable

  4. Unfolded bury core  2o Molten globule 3o 4o protein HB aa (loose 3o) (breathing) Steps of Folding < ms Up to 1s

  5. Why won’t it fold? Most common obstacles to a native fold: • Aggregation • Non-native disulfide bridge formation • Isomerization of proline

  6. Energy Funnel for Folding • Multiple folding pathways can occur • Model this with energy funnel

  7. Chaperonins / Heat Shock Proteins HSPs help proteins fold by preventing aggregation • Recognize only unfolded proteins • Not specific • Recognizes exposed HB patches • Prevent aggregation of unfolded or misfolded proteins • HSP70 • Assembly & disassembly of oligomers • Regulate translocation to ER • HSP60 (GroEL) & HSP10 (GroES) • Work as a complex

  8. GroEL • Each subunit • Apical (a/b motif) • Opening of chaperone to unfolded protein • Flexible • HB • Intermediate (a helices) • Allow ATP and ADP diffusion • Flexible hinges • Equatorial (a helices) • ATP binding site • Stabilizes double ring structure • Central cavity up to 90Å diam. • 7 subunits in one ring • 2 rings back to back

  9. GroES • Cap to the GroEL • Each subunit • b sheet • b hairpin (roof) • Mobile loop (int w/ GroEL) • 7 subunits in functional molecule

  10. GroEL+ GroES work together • GroEL makes up a cylinder • Each side has 7 identical subunits • Each side can accommodate one unfolded protein • 1 GroES binds to one side of GroEL at a time • Allosteric inhibition at other site • One side of cylinder is actively folding protein at a time

  11. GroEL/ATP complex at side A • Bind GroES on this side 7 ATP7 ADP this side has a wider cavity but closed top other side has smaller cavity and open top • Side B ring binds unfolded protein GroES falls off of side A ADP falls off of side A • Side B ring binds 7 ATPs • GroES binds GroEL/ATP 7 ATP7 ADP protein folding occurs • Side A ring binds 7 ATPs protein folding occurs 7 ATP7 ADP (side A) 7 ADP & GroES (side B) falls off • Side A ring binds next unfolded protein

  12. Mechanism of Chaperonin Function • Switch side of ATP binding each time • Switch side of GroES binding for each folding rxn • Switch side of protein docking for each folding rxn Fink, Chaperone Mediated Folding, Physiological Reviews, 1999

More Related