Abstract

How and when disulfide bonds form in proteins relative to the stage of their folding is a fundamental question in cell biology. Two models describe this relationship: the folded precursor model, in which a nascent structure forms before disulfides do, and the quasi-stochastic model, where disulfides form prior to folding. Here we investigated oxidative folding of three structurally diverse substrates, β2-microglobulin, prolactin, and the disintegrin domain of ADAM metallopeptidase domain 10 (ADAM10), to understand how these mechanisms apply in a cellular context. We used a eukaryotic cell-free translation system in which we could identify disulfide isomers in stalled translation intermediates to characterize the timing of disulfide formation relative to translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum and the presence of non-native disulfides. Our results indicate that in a domain lacking secondary structure, disulfides form before conformational folding through a process prone to nonnative disulfide formation, whereas in proteins with defined secondary structure, native disulfide formation occurs after partial folding. These findings reveal that the nascent protein structure promotes correct disulfide formation during cotranslational folding.

Highlights

  • How and when disulfide bonds form in proteins relative to the stage of their folding is a fundamental question in cell biology

  • The three proteins used in this study, ␤2-microglobulin (␤2M), prolactin, and the disintegrin domain of ADAM metallopeptidase domain 10 (ADAM10), were chosen for their diversity of secondary structure and disulfide bonding (Fig. 1A)

  • Our results indicate that disulfide formation occurs via two mechanisms that depend on a protein’s secondary structure

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Summary

Introduction

How and when disulfide bonds form in proteins relative to the stage of their folding is a fundamental question in cell biology. Two models describe this relationship: the folded precursor model, in which a nascent structure forms before disulfides do, and the quasi-stochastic model, where disulfides form prior to folding. Tel.: 44-141-330-3870; When polypeptides contain more than two cysteines, correct pairing is required to form the native disulfide pattern; the spatial positioning of cysteine side chains is required for this correct pairing, closely linking disulfide formation to the process of conformational folding. Evidence shows that non-native disulfides can act as important intermediates in the native folding of certain proteins [10]

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