| Literature DB >> 10610781 |
Abstract
Biosynthetic folding, beginning with the growing nascent chain and leading to the biologically active structure within its proper cellular context, is one function shared by all proteins. We show that the bacterial luciferase beta subunit reaches its final native form in the alphabeta heterodimer much more rapidly during biosynthetic folding than during refolding from urea. The rate of formation of active enzyme is determined by a short-lived folding intermediate, which is able to associate with the alpha subunit very rapidly following release from the ribosome. This intermediate appears to involve a transient interaction of the C-terminal region of the beta subunit, a region distant from the subunit interface, but intimately involved in heterodimerization. Refolding of the beta subunit under similar conditions proceeds much more slowly. We have characterized both pathways and show that the basic difference between biosynthetic folding and refolding from urea is that the newly synthesized beta subunit enters the folding pathway at a point beyond the slow, rate-determining step that limits the rate of the renaturation process and constitutes a kinetic trap. This mechanism embodies a major strategy, the avoidance of slow-folding intermediates and kinetic traps, that may be employed by many proteins to achieve fast and efficient biosynthetic folding. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10610781 DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.3281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469