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Development of free-energy-based models for chaperonin containing TCP-1 mediated folding of actin
Author(s) -
Gabriel Altschuler,
Keith R. Willison
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of the royal society interface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.655
H-Index - 139
eISSN - 1742-5689
pISSN - 1742-5662
DOI - 10.1098/rsif.2008.0185
Subject(s) - chaperonin , groel , actin , atp hydrolysis , protein folding , biophysics , folding (dsp implementation) , protein filament , energy landscape , actin remodeling , microbiology and biotechnology , cytoskeleton , chemistry , biology , actin cytoskeleton , biochemistry , atpase , cell , enzyme , engineering , escherichia coli , electrical engineering , gene
A free-energy-based approach is used to describe the mechanism through which chaperonin-containing TCP-1 (CCT) folds the filament-forming cytoskeletal protein actin, which is one of its primary substrates. The experimental observations on the actin folding and unfolding pathways are collated and then re-examined from this perspective, allowing us to determine the position of the CCT intervention on the actin free-energy folding landscape. The essential role for CCT in actin folding is to provide a free-energy contribution from its ATP cycle, which drives actin to fold from a stable, trapped intermediate I3, to a less stable but now productive folding intermediate I2. We develop two hypothetical mechanisms for actin folding founded upon concepts established for the bacterial type I chaperonin GroEL and extend them to the much more complex CCT system of eukaryotes. A new model is presented in which CCT facilitates free-energy transfer through direct coupling of the nucleotide hydrolysis cycle to the phases of actin substrate maturation.

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