Abstract
Thioredoxin, DsbA, the N-terminal active-site domain a and the non-active-site domain b of protein-disulfide isomerase are all monomeric with a thioredoxin fold, and each exhibits low or no isomerase and chaperone activity. We have linked the N terminus of the above four monomers, individually, to the C terminus of the N-terminal domain of DsbC via the flexible linker helix of the latter to produce four domain hybrids, DsbCn-Trx, DsbCn-DsbA, DsbCn-PDIa, and DsbCn-PDIb. These four hybrid proteins form homodimers, and except for DsbCn-PDIb they exhibit new or greatly elevated isomerase as well as chaperone activity. Three-dimensional structure prediction indicates that all the four domain hybrids adopt DsbC-like V-shaped structure with a broad uncharged cleft between the two arms for binding of non-native protein folding intermediates. The results provide strong evidence that dimerization creates chaperone and isomerase activity for monomeric thiol-protein oxidases or reductases, and suggesting a pathway for proteins to acquire new functions and/or higher biological efficiency during evolution.
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