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PROTEIN FOLDING AND DEGRADATION Kanokporn Boonsirichai Proteins must fold up into their unique 3-D conformation To be able to perform their specific function To assemble correctly with other proteins To bind with small-molecule cofactors that are required for their activity To be appropriately modified by protein kinases or other proteinmodifying enzymes When a protein folds: Most of its hydrophobic residues are buried into an interior core. A large number of noncovalent interactions are formed. The final conformation is usually of the lowest free energy. Proteins begin to fold as they exit from the ribosome Secondary structures are formed and aligned roughly within a few seconds “Molten globule” Cytochrome b562 Side-chain adjustment (slow) to form the appropriate tertiary structure By the time it is released from the ribosome, much of the folding has already been completed. Molecular Chaperones A class of proteins which mediate protein folding Heat-Shock Proteins (Hsp) Firstly identified in E. coli Increased synthesis at elevated temperature (42oC) What happens at elevated temperature? Why does the cell need more chaperones? Heat-Shock Proteins (Hsp)in Eucaryotes Two major families: Hsp60 and Hsp70 Members are organelle-specific: cytosolic, ERassociated, mitochondrial Work with their own set of assiciated proteins Show an affinity for exposed hybrophobic patches Hydrolyze ATPs • • Hsp70 • • Works with Hsp40 Performs its function as the target protein is being translated Binds to a string of seven hydrophobic amino acids Hydrolyzes an ATP as it binds; releases ADP and rebinds ATP as it dissociates Hsp60 (Chaperonin) •Acts after its target protein has been fully synthesized. •Provides a favorable environment for the target protein to refold. •Binding of ATP and GroES may transiently stretch the misfolded protein. •ATP hydrolysis triggers the release of the target protein. Choices of Protein Quality Control Proteasome A machinery for protein destruction An abundant ATP-dependent protease (= 1% of cellular proteins) Found in the cytosol and the nucleus Only marked proteins are targeted to the proteasome Ubiquitin • A 76-amino-acid tag • Activated through a high-energy thioester linkage to a cysteine residue • Is transferred to the lysine residue of the target protein ~ 30 distinct kinds Targets •Denatured/ misfolded proteins •Proteins with oxidized/ abnormal amino acids biology.caltech.edu/Members/Deshaies •E3 recognizes specific degradation signals in the target proteins. •Multiubiquitin chain is recognized by the proteasome. Regulated Destruction of Proteins Some proteins turn over rapidly at all time. Some proteins are stable most of the time but become unstable under a certain condition. Mechanisms •Activation of specific E3 •Activation/ exposure of the degradation signal in within the target protein Activation of Ubiquitin Ligase Activation of Degradation Signal Abnormally folded proteins may form protease-resistant aggregates •Some protein aggregates form a fibril structure •Cross-beta filaments: layered of polypeptide chains with continuous stacks of beta sheets Prion disease Protein-aggregates-induced Diseases Huntinton’s disease Alzheimer’s disease Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (CJD) in humans Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle (i.e. mad cow disease) Prion diseases Regulation of cellular protein levels can occur at many different points •Transcription •RNA processing •RNA transport •Translation •Protein degradation