Author:
Sadat Anwar,Tiwari Satyam,Verma Kanika,Ray Arjun,Ali Mudassar,Upadhyay Vaibhav,Singh Anupam,Chaphalkar Aseem,Ghosh Asmita,Chakraborty Rahul,Chakraborty Kausik,Mapa Koyeli
Abstract
ABSTRACTThe folding landscape of proteins can change during evolution with the accumulation of mutations that may introduce entropic or enthalpic barriers in the protein folding pathway, making it a possible substrate of molecular chaperones in vivo. Can the nature of such physical barriers of folding dictate the feasibility of chaperone-assistance? To address this, we have simulated the evolutionary step to chaperone-dependence keeping GroEL/ES as the target chaperone and GFP as a model protein in an unbiased screen. We find that the mutation conferring GroEL/ES dependence in vivo and in vitro encode an entropic trap in the folding pathway rescued by the chaperonin. Additionally, GroEL/ES can edit the formation of non-native contacts similar to DnaK/J/E machinery. However, this capability is not utilized by the substrates in vivo. As a consequence, GroEL/ES caters to buffer mutations that predominantly cause entropic traps, despite possessing the capacity to edit both enthalpic and entropic traps in the folding pathway of the substrate protein.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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