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  • Protein quality control acts on folding intermediates to shape the effects of mutations on organismal fitness.

Protein quality control acts on folding intermediates to shape the effects of mutations on organismal fitness.

Molecular cell (2012-12-12)
Shimon Bershtein, Wanmeng Mu, Adrian W R Serohijos, Jingwen Zhou, Eugene I Shakhnovich
ABSTRACT

What are the molecular properties of proteins that fall on the radar of protein quality control (PQC)? Here we mutate the E. coli's gene encoding dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and replace it with bacterial orthologous genes to determine how components of PQC modulate fitness effects of these genetic changes. We find that chaperonins GroEL/ES and protease Lon compete for binding to molten globule intermediate of DHFR, resulting in a peculiar symmetry in their action: overexpression of GroEL/ES and deletion of Lon both restore growth of deleterious DHFR mutants and most of the slow-growing orthologous DHFR strains. Kinetic steady-state modeling predicts and experimentation verifies that mutations affect fitness by shifting the flux balance in cellular milieu between protein production, folding, and degradation orchestrated by PQC through the interaction with folding intermediates.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Dihydrofolate Reductase human, ≥80% (SDS-PAGE), recombinant, expressed in E. coli, ≥1 units/mg protein