Abstract

Trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone encountered by the nascent chain in bacteria and forms a stoichiometric complex with the ribosome. However, the functional significance of the high cytosolic concentration of uncomplexed TF, the majority of which is dimeric, is unknown. To gain insight into TF function, we investigated the TF concentration dependence of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) reactivation yield in the presence and absence of the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone system in vitro. Cross-linking results indicate that the observed decrease in the reactivation yield of GAPDH at high concentrations of TF is due to the formation of a stable complex between TF dimer and GAPDH intermediates. In the absence of TF, or at low TF concentrations, the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone system had negligible effect on the GAPDH refolding yield. However, GAPDH intermediates bound and held by dimeric TF could be specifically rescued by the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone system in an ATP-dependent manner. This indicates the potential of TF, in its dimeric form, to act as a binding chaperone, maintaining non-native proteins in a refolding competent conformation and cooperating with downstream molecular chaperones to facilitate post-translational or post-stress protein folding.

Highlights

  • Trigger factor (TF), most proteins fold rapidly upon completion of synthesis, and only 20 –35% of polypeptide chains require the further assistance of other chaperones [12, 13]

  • When denatured glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) was diluted into buffer containing TF, the reactivation yield of GAPDH increased with increasing TF concentration, reaching a maximum (60%) at 6 ␮M TF

  • GAPDH, which is a homotetramer with monomeric molecular mass of 36 kDa, is widely used as a substrate to study the function of molecular chaperones in vitro, and with most chaperones, including GroEL [39], DsbC [27], and PDI [28], the reactivation yield of GAPDH increases and reaches a plateau with increasing chaperone concentration

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Summary

Introduction

TF, most proteins fold rapidly upon completion of synthesis, and only 20 –35% of polypeptide chains require the further assistance of other chaperones [12, 13]. Cross-linking results indicate that the observed decrease in the reactivation yield of GAPDH at high concentrations of TF is due to the formation of a stable complex between TF dimer and GAPDH intermediates.

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