Abstract

The Escherichia coli DegP has been reported to function both as molecular chaperone and protease for the quality control of outer membrane protein biogenesis. Activation of the inactive DegP hexamers was believed to occur via their disassembly into trimeric units and subsequent reassembly into larger oligomers (12-mers and 24-mers). Here, we analyzed the thermal stability and the unfolding dynamics of the different secondary structure components of the DegP hexamers using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and temperature-jump nanosecond time-resolved IR difference absorbance spectroscopy. We found that the interfacial secondary structure components possess a degreed thermal stability, with the disassembly of the DegP hexamers follows a “proteinquake” manner, such that the fully exposed parts of the interfacial β-sheets serving as the temperature sensor and epicenter to drive the sequential unfolding/disassembly process that finishes within about 134 ns at room temperature.

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