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Letters to Nature
Nature 366, 279-282 (18 November 1993) | doi:10.1038/366279a0; Accepted 12 October 1993
Identification of nucleotide-binding regions in the chaperonin proteins GroEL and GroES
Jörg Martin, Scott Geromanos*, Paul Tempest* & F. Ulrich Hartl†
- Cellular Biochemistry and Biophysics Program, and * Molecular Biology Program, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York 10021, USA
- †To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
THE chaperonin GroEL, a tetradecameric cylinder consisting of subunits
of Mr
60,000 (60K), and its cofactor GroES, a heptameric ring of
10K subunits, mediate protein folding in the cytosol of Escherichia
coll1–3. In the presence of nucleotide, GroES forms a 1:1
complex with GroEL which binds unfolded protein in its central cavity and
releases it to allow folding upon ATP hydrolysis4–7. Using
labelling with azido-ATP, we have identified a protease-stable
nucleotide-binding domain of Mr 40K in the GroEL subunits (residues
153-531). Azido-ATP is crosslinked to the highly conserved Tyr 477, indicating
that this residue is close to the purine ring of the bound nucleotide.
Surprisingly, GroES also binds ATP cooperatively and with an affinity
comparable to that of GroEL. Azido-nucleotide labelling of GroES subunits
occurs at the conserved Tyr 71 in a protease-stable 6.5K domain (starting at
residue 33). Proteinase K cleavage at residue 32 is prevented when GroES is
bound to GroEL. ATP binding to GroES may be important in charging the seven
subunits of the interacting GroEL ring with ATP to facilitate cooperative ATP
binding and hydrolysis for substrate protein release.
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