Authors
Sathish K Lakshmipathy, Sladjana Tomic, Christian M Kaiser, Hung-Chun Chang, Pierre Genevaux, Costa Georgopoulos, José M Barral, Arthur E Johnson, F Ulrich Hartl, Stephanie A Etchells
Publication date
2007/4/20
Journal
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume
282
Issue
16
Pages
12186-12193
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The role of ribosome-binding molecular chaperones in protein folding is not yet well understood. Trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone to interact with nascent polypeptides as they emerge from the bacterial ribosome. It binds to the ribosome as a monomer but forms dimers in free solution. Based on recent crystal structures, TF has an elongated shape, with the peptidyl-prolyl-cis/trans-isomerase (PPIase) domain and the N-terminal ribosome binding domain positioned at opposite ends of the molecule and the C-terminal domain, which forms two arms, positioned in between. By using site specifically labeled TF proteins, we have demonstrated that all three domains of TF interact with nascent chains during translation. Interactions with the PPIase domain were length-dependent but independent of PPIase activity. Interestingly, with free TF, these same sites were found to be involved in forming the dimer interface …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SK Lakshmipathy, S Tomic, CM Kaiser, HC Chang… - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2007