Abstract

Over the last 50 years, significant progress has been made toward understanding how small single-domain proteins fold. However, very little is known about folding mechanisms of medium and large multidomain proteins that predominate the proteomes of all forms of life. Large proteins frequently fold cotranslationally and/or require chaperones. Firefly (Photinus pyralis) luciferase (Luciferase, 550 residues) has been a model of a cotranslationally folding protein whose extremely slow refolding (approximately days) is catalyzed by chaperones. However, the mechanism by which Luciferase misfolds and how chaperones assist Luciferase refolding remains unknown. Here we combine single-molecule force spectroscopy (atomic force microscopy (AFM)/single-molecule force spectroscopy) with steered molecular dynamic computer simulations to unravel the mechanism of chaperone-assisted Luciferase refolding. Our AFM and steered molecular dynamic results show that partially unfolded Luciferase, with the N-terminal domain remaining folded, can refold robustly without chaperones. Complete unfolding causes Luciferase to get trapped in very stable non-native configurations involving interactions between N- and C-terminal residues. However, chaperones allow the completely unfolded Luciferase to refold quickly in AFM experiments, strongly suggesting that chaperones are able to sequester non-natively contacting residues. More generally, we suggest that many chaperones, rather than actively promoting the folding, mimic the ribosomal exit tunnel and physically separate protein domains, allowing them to fold in a cotranslational-like sequential process.

Highlights

  • Bulk experiments show that Luciferase refolding requires the aid of chaperone proteins

  • We combine single-molecule force spectroscopy (atomic force microscopy (AFM)/single-molecule force spectroscopy) with steered molecular dynamic computer simulations to unravel the mechanism of chaperone-assisted Luciferase refolding

  • Luciferase Refolding Rescued by Chaperones or when given chaperones (24, 26 –28). These experiments are elucidating, important questions remain: what prevents Luciferase from refolding quickly? How does cotranslational folding prevent misfolding? How exactly do chaperones allow relatively fast refolding? Here we address these questions using single-molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS)

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Summary

Background

Bulk experiments show that Luciferase refolding requires the aid of chaperone proteins. SMFS has two unique advantages over traditional methods for studying large multidomain proteins Their unfolding and refolding can be examined for individual proteins in isolation, minimizing the opportunity for their aggregation in the unfolded state, and SMFS allows the precise manipulation of proteins and their subunits and, offers unprecedented control for denaturing single domains/subunits within multidomain proteins [29, 30]. This approach reduces the complexity of the folding reaction and facilitates relating the experimental data to the structural information [29, 31, 32]

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