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1.
Adv Biol (Weinh) ; 7(12): e2300105, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37409427

ABSTRACT

Single molecule techniques are particularly well suited for investigating the processes of protein folding and chaperone assistance. However, current assays provide only a limited perspective on the various ways in which the cellular environment can influence the folding pathway of a protein. In this study, a single molecule mechanical interrogation assay is developed and used to monitor protein unfolding and refolding within a cytosolic solution. This allows to test the cumulative topological effect of the cytoplasmic interactome on the folding process. The results reveal a stabilization against forced unfolding for partial folds, which are attributed to the protective effect of the cytoplasmic environment against unfolding and aggregation. This research opens the possibility of conducting single molecule molecular folding experiments in quasi-biological environments.


Subject(s)
Protein Folding , Protein Unfolding
2.
Sci Adv ; 8(9): eabl6293, 2022 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35245117

ABSTRACT

The collapse of polypeptides is thought important to protein folding, aggregation, intrinsic disorder, and phase separation. However, whether polypeptide collapse is modulated in cells to control protein states is unclear. Here, using integrated protein manipulation and imaging, we show that the chaperonin GroEL-ES can accelerate the folding of proteins by strengthening their collapse. GroEL induces contractile forces in substrate chains, which draws them into the cavity and triggers a general compaction and discrete folding transitions, even for slow-folding proteins. This collapse enhancement is strongest in the nucleotide-bound states of GroEL and is aided by GroES binding to the cavity rim and by the amphiphilic C-terminal tails at the cavity bottom. Collapse modulation is distinct from other proposed GroEL-ES folding acceleration mechanisms, including steric confinement and misfold unfolding. Given the prevalence of collapse throughout the proteome, we conjecture that collapse modulation is more generally relevant within the protein quality control machinery.

3.
Nature ; 578(7796): E23, 2020 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32034316

ABSTRACT

An Amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.

4.
Nature ; 578(7794): 317-320, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31996849

ABSTRACT

The ability to reverse protein aggregation is vital to cells1,2. Hsp100 disaggregases such as ClpB and Hsp104 are proposed to catalyse this reaction by translocating polypeptide loops through their central pore3,4. This model of disaggregation is appealing, as it could explain how polypeptides entangled within aggregates can be extracted and subsequently refolded with the assistance of Hsp704,5. However, the model is also controversial, as the necessary motor activity has not been identified6-8 and recent findings indicate non-processive mechanisms such as entropic pulling or Brownian ratcheting9,10. How loop formation would be accomplished is also obscure. Indeed, cryo-electron microscopy studies consistently show single polypeptide strands in the Hsp100 pore11,12. Here, by following individual ClpB-substrate complexes in real time, we unambiguously demonstrate processive translocation of looped polypeptides. We integrate optical tweezers with fluorescent-particle tracking to show that ClpB translocates both arms of the loop simultaneously and switches to single-arm translocation when encountering obstacles. ClpB is notably powerful and rapid; it exerts forces of more than 50 pN at speeds of more than 500 residues per second in bursts of up to 28 residues. Remarkably, substrates refold while exiting the pore, analogous to co-translational folding. Our findings have implications for protein-processing phenomena including ubiquitin-mediated remodelling by Cdc48 (or its mammalian orthologue p97)13 and degradation by the 26S proteasome14.


Subject(s)
Endopeptidase Clp/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/metabolism , Protein Aggregates , Adenosine Triphosphatases/chemistry , Adenosine Triphosphatases/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/chemistry , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Endopeptidase Clp/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Fluorescence , Heat-Shock Proteins/chemistry , Kinetics , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Optical Tweezers , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Protein Multimerization , Protein Refolding , Ubiquitin/metabolism
5.
Commun Chem ; 3(1): 20, 2020 Feb 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36703465

ABSTRACT

Many proteins form dynamic complexes with DNA, RNA, and other proteins, which often involves protein conformational changes that are key to function. Yet, methods to probe these critical dynamics are scarce. Here we combine optical tweezers with fluorescence imaging to simultaneously monitor the conformation of individual proteins and their binding to partner proteins. Central is a protein-DNA coupling strategy, which uses exonuclease digestion and partial re-synthesis to generate DNA overhangs of different lengths, and ligation to oligo-labeled proteins. It provides up to 40 times higher coupling yields than existing protocols and enables new fluorescence-tweezers assays, which require particularly long and strong DNA handles. We demonstrate the approach by detecting the emission of a tethered fluorescent protein and of a molecular chaperone (trigger factor) complexed with its client. We conjecture that our strategy will be an important tool to study conformational dynamics within larger biomolecular complexes.

6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(48): 14906-11, 2015 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26567153

ABSTRACT

Epistatic interactions can frustrate and shape evolutionary change. Indeed, phenotypes may fail to evolve when essential mutations are only accessible through positive selection if they are fixed simultaneously. How environmental variability affects such constraints is poorly understood. Here, we studied genetic constraints in fixed and fluctuating environments using the Escherichia coli lac operon as a model system for genotype-environment interactions. We found that, in different fixed environments, all trajectories that were reconstructed by applying point mutations within the transcription factor-operator interface became trapped at suboptima, where no additional improvements were possible. Paradoxically, repeated switching between these same environments allows unconstrained adaptation by continuous improvements. This evolutionary mode is explained by pervasive cross-environmental tradeoffs that reposition the peaks in such a way that trapped genotypes can repeatedly climb ascending slopes and hence, escape adaptive stasis. Using a Markov approach, we developed a mathematical framework to quantify the landscape-crossing rates and show that this ratchet-like adaptive mechanism is robust in a wide spectrum of fluctuating environments. Overall, this study shows that genetic constraints can be overcome by environmental change and that cross-environmental tradeoffs do not necessarily impede but also, can facilitate adaptive evolution. Because tradeoffs and environmental variability are ubiquitous in nature, we speculate this evolutionary mode to be of general relevance.


Subject(s)
Directed Molecular Evolution , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Gene-Environment Interaction , Lac Operon/genetics , Point Mutation , Transcription Factors/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism
7.
Nature ; 514(7522): 376-9, 2014 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25186725

ABSTRACT

Elucidating the role of molecular stochasticity in cellular growth is central to understanding phenotypic heterogeneity and the stability of cellular proliferation. The inherent stochasticity of metabolic reaction events should have negligible effect, because of averaging over the many reaction events contributing to growth. Indeed, metabolism and growth are often considered to be constant for fixed conditions. Stochastic fluctuations in the expression level of metabolic enzymes could produce variations in the reactions they catalyse. However, whether such molecular fluctuations can affect growth is unclear, given the various stabilizing regulatory mechanisms, the slow adjustment of key cellular components such as ribosomes, and the secretion and buffering of excess metabolites. Here we use time-lapse microscopy to measure fluctuations in the instantaneous growth rate of single cells of Escherichia coli, and quantify time-resolved cross-correlations with the expression of lac genes and enzymes in central metabolism. We show that expression fluctuations of catabolically active enzymes can propagate and cause growth fluctuations, with transmission depending on the limitation of the enzyme to growth. Conversely, growth fluctuations propagate back to perturb expression. Accordingly, enzymes were found to transmit noise to other unrelated genes via growth. Homeostasis is promoted by a noise-cancelling mechanism that exploits fluctuations in the dilution of proteins by cell-volume expansion. The results indicate that molecular noise is propagated not only by regulatory proteins but also by metabolic reactions. They also suggest that cellular metabolism is inherently stochastic, and a generic source of phenotypic heterogeneity.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/growth & development , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Single-Cell Analysis , Cell Enlargement , Cell Proliferation , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Homeostasis , Lac Operon/genetics , Microscopy , Models, Biological , Stochastic Processes , Time-Lapse Imaging
8.
Plant Cell Rep ; 28(7): 1011-21, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19466427

ABSTRACT

In this work, three dehydrin genes, QrDhn1, QrDhn2, QrDhn3, were isolated from recalcitrant oak (Quercus robur). Their expression pattern was analyzed in both zygotic and somatic embryos as well as in vegetative tissues exposed to different kinds of abiotic stresses including desiccation, osmotic stress, and chilling. The QrDhn1 gene encoding for Y(n)SK(n) type dehydrin was expressed during later stages of zygotic embryo development but in somatic embryos only when exposed to osmotic or desiccation stress. In contrast, the other two oak dehydrin genes encoding for putative K(n) type dehydrins were expressed only in somatic embryos (both not-treated and osmotically stressed) and leaves of oak seedlings exposed to desiccation. Behavior of these genes suggests that different dehydrins are involved in processes of seed maturation and response to altered osmotic (water status) conditions in somatic embryos. Revealing further members of dehydrin gene family in recalcitrant oak might contribute to clarify non-orthodox seed behavior as well as identify mechanisms contributing to desiccation tolerance in plants.


Subject(s)
Desiccation , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Quercus/genetics , Seeds/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , DNA, Plant/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Genes, Plant , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Proteins/genetics , Quercus/metabolism , Seeds/genetics , Sequence Alignment
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