4.3 Article

Assisted protein folding at low temperature: evolutionary adaptation of the Antarctic fish chaperonin CCT and its client proteins

Journal

BIOLOGY OPEN
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages 261-270

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/bio.20147427

Keywords

CCT; TriC; Chaperone; Chaperonin; Protein folding; Actin; Tubulin; Thermal adaptation; Evolution

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [ANT-0635470, ANT-0944517, PLR-1247510]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [BFU2010-15703, BFU2010-18948, CTM2009-08095-E/ANT]
  3. National Science Foundation, Academic Research Infrastructure Recovery and Reinvestment Program [OCE-0963010]
  4. Directorate For Geosciences
  5. Division Of Ocean Sciences [0963010] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
  7. Directorate For Geosciences [1247510] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Eukaryotic ectotherms of the Southern Ocean face energetic challenges to protein folding assisted by the cytosolic chaperonin CCT. We hypothesize that CCT and its client proteins (CPs) have co-evolved molecular adaptations that facilitate CCT-CP interaction and the ATP-driven folding cycle at low temperature. To test this hypothesis, we compared the functional and structural properties of CCT-CP systems from testis tissues of an Antarctic fish, Gobionotothen gibberifrons (Lonnberg) (habitat/body T = -1.9 to +2 degrees C), and of the cow (body T = 37 degrees C). We examined the temperature dependence of the binding of denatured CPs (bactin, beta-tubulin) by fish and bovine CCTs, both in homologous and heterologous combinations and at temperatures between -4 degrees C and 20 degrees C, in a buffer conducive to binding of the denatured CP to the open conformation of CCT. In homologous combination, the percentage of G. gibberifrons CCT bound to CP declined linearly with increasing temperature, whereas the converse was true for bovine CCT. Binding of CCT to heterologous CPs was low, irrespective of temperature. When reactions were supplemented with ATP, G. gibberifrons CCT catalyzed the folding and release of actin at 2 degrees C. The ATPase activity of apo-CCT from G. gibberifrons at 4 degrees C was similar to 2.5-fold greater than that of apo-bovine CCT, whereas equivalent activities were observed at 20 degrees C. Based on these results, we conclude that the catalytic folding cycle of CCT from Antarctic fishes is partially compensated at their habitat temperature, probably by means of enhanced CP-binding affinity and increased flexibility of the CCT subunits.

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