NMR relaxation dispersion techniques were used to investigate conformational exchange of the three-helix bundle protein KIX under native conditions. These experiments provide site-resolved kinetic information about microsecond-to-millisecond time scale motions along with structural (chemical shift) information without requiring a perturbation of the equilibrium. All kinetic data are consistent with an apparent two-state transition between natively folded KIX and a partially unfolded high-energy state that is populated to 3.0 +/- 0.2% at 27 degrees C. By combining (13)C- and (15)N-based experiments that probe specific structural aspects, we show that the sparsely populated high-energy state displays a strong conformational preference. An isolated secondary structural element, C-terminal helix alpha3, is highly populated, while the hydrophobic core of the domain and the remainder of the protein backbone, including helices alpha1 and alpha2, are disordered and devoid of specific interactions. This high-energy state presumably represents the equilibrium analogue of a folding intermediate that is transiently populated in stopped-flow kinetic experiments [Horng, J. C., Tracz, S. M., Lumb, K. J., and Raleigh, D. P. (2002) Biochemistry 44, 627-634].
Plants often respond to abiotic stresses by the increased expression of LEA (late embryogenesis abundant) proteins, so called because they also accompany seed formation. Whereas the cellular function of LEA proteins in mitigating the damage caused by stress is clear, the molecular mechanisms of their action are rather enigmatic. Several models have been developed, based on their putative activities as ion sinks, stabilizers of membrane structure, buffers of hydrate water, antioxidants and/or chaperones. Due to their known structural flexibility, this latter idea has received little experimental attention thus far. Recently, however, it has been suggested that intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) may exert chaperone activity by an "entropy transfer" mechanism. In our subsequent study published in the May issue of Plant Physiology, we provided evidence that two group 2 LEA proteins, ERD (early response to dehydration) 10 and 14, are potent molecular chaperones. This observation may have far-reaching implications, as it may explain how LEA proteins of ill-defined structures protect plant cells during dehydration, and it may also lead to the general experimental validation of the entropy transfer model of disordered chaperones.
Details of the functional mechanisms of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) in living cells is an area not frequently investigated. Here, we dissect the molecular mechanism of action of an IDP in cells by detailed structural analyses based on an in-cell nuclear magnetic resonance experiment. We show that the ID stress protein (IDSP) A. thaliana Early Response to Dehydration (ERD14) is capable of protecting E. coli cells under heat stress. The overexpression of ERD14 increases the viability of E. coli cells from 38.9% to 73.9% following heat stress (50 °C × 15 min). We also provide evidence that the protection is mainly achieved by protecting the proteome of the cells. In-cell NMR experiments performed in E. coli cells show that the protective activity is associated with a largely disordered structural state with conserved, short sequence motifs (K- and H-segments), which transiently sample helical conformations in vitro and engage in partner binding in vivo. Other regions of the protein, such as its S segment and its regions linking and flanking the binding motifs, remain unbound and disordered in the cell. Our data suggest that the cellular function of ERD14 is compatible with its residual structural disorder in vivo.
a b s t r a c tRibosomal proteins assist the assembly and increase the stability of ribosomal RNA, without requiring ATP for their action. Some ribosomal proteins are also known to have essential functions outside the ribosome, i.e. promiscuity of functions that appears to correlate with their structural disorder. Here we addressed if certain ribosomal proteins with RNA chaperone activity and with a significant level of disorder also have protein-chaperone activity in vitro. Four proteins of the large subunit of Escherichia coli ribosome, L15, L16, L18 and L19 have been tested in three chaperone assays, in which all of them exhibited potent chaperone activity, commensurable with that of heat shock protein 90 kDa. These observations highlight possible novel aspects of the promiscuous functions of ribosomal proteins outside of the ribosome.
Dehydrins are a class of stress proteins that belong to the family of Late Embryogenesis Abundant (LEA) proteins in plants, so named because they are highly expressed in late stages of seed formation. In somatic cells, their expression is very low under normal conditions, but increases critically upon dehydration elicited by water stress, high salinity or cold. Dehydrins are thought to be intrinsically disordered proteins, which represents a challenge in understanding their structure-function relationship. Herein we present the backbone (1)H, (15)N and (13)C NMR assignment of the 185 amino acid long ERD14 (Early Response to Dehydration 14), which is a K(3)S-type, typical dehydrin of A. thaliana. Secondary chemical shifts as well as NMR relaxation data show that ERD14 is fully disordered under near native conditions, with short regions of somewhat restricted motion and 5-25% helical propensity. These results suggest that ERD14 may have partially preformed elements for functional interaction with its partner(s) and set the stage for further detailed structural and functional studies of ERD14 both in vitro and in vivo.
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