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PapD-like chaperones provide the missing information for folding of pilin proteins
Author(s) -
Michelle M. Barnhart,
Jerome S. Pinkner,
Gabriel E. Soto,
Frederic G. Sauer,
Sol Langermann,
Gabriel Waksman,
Carl Frieden,
Scott J. Hultgren
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.130183897
Subject(s) - chaperone (clinical) , pilus , biogenesis , pilin , protein folding , periplasmic space , chaperonin , protein subunit , co chaperone , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , folding (dsp implementation) , biochemistry , biophysics , heat shock protein , escherichia coli , gene , hsp90 , medicine , engineering , pathology , electrical engineering
A fundamental question in molecular biology is how proteins fold into domains that can serve as assembly modules for building up large macromolecular structures. The biogenesis of pili on the surface of Gram-negative bacteria requires the orchestration of a complex process that includes protein synthesis, folding via small chaperones, secretion, and assembly. The results presented here support the hypothesis that pilus subunit folding and biogenesis proceed via mechanisms termed donor strand complementation and donor strand exchange. Here we show that the steric information necessary for pilus subunit folding is not contained in one polypeptide sequence. Rather, the missing information is transiently donated by a strand of a small chaperone to allow folding. Providing the missing information for folding, via a 13-amino acid peptide extension to the C-terminal end of a pilus subunit, resulted in the production of a protein that no longer required the chaperone to fold. This mechanism of small periplasmic chaperone function described here deviates from classical hsp60 chaperone-assisted folding.

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