Friends in need: how chaperonins recognize and remodel proteins that require folding assistance
George Stan, George H. Lorimer, and D. Thirumalai

TL;DR
This paper reviews how chaperonins recognize and remodel misfolded proteins, detailing their structural mechanisms, conformational changes, and roles in cellular health and disease, with implications for therapeutic development.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the structural and mechanistic differences between group I and group II chaperonins in protein folding assistance.
Findings
Chaperonins undergo ATP-driven conformational changes during protein folding cycles.
Group I chaperonins recognize many misfolded proteins non-specifically.
Group II chaperonins assist specific substrate proteins.
Abstract
Chaperonins are biological nanomachines that help newly translated proteins to fold by rescuing them from kinetically trapped misfolded states. Protein folding assistance by the chaperonin machinery is obligatory in vivo for a subset of proteins in the bacterial proteome. Chaperonins are large oligomeric complexes, with unusual seven fold symmetry (group I) or eight/nine fold symmetry (group II), that form double-ring constructs, enclosing a central folding chamber. Dramatic large-scale conformational changes, that take place during ATP-driven cycles, allow chaperonins to bind misfolded proteins, encapsulate them into the expanded cavity and release them back into the cellular environment, regardless of whether they are folded or not. The theory associated with the iterative annealing mechanism, which incorporated the conformational free energy landscape description of protein folding,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeat shock proteins research · Protein Structure and Dynamics · Enzyme Structure and Function
