1. A Nucleotide Exchange Factor, BAP, dissociated Protein-Molecular Chaperone Complex in vitro
- Author
-
Lee Myoung-Joo, Kim Dong-Eun, Kim Young-Hee, Jeong Yong-Kee, Chung Kyung-Tae, and Lee Tae-Ho
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,animal structures ,genetic structures ,biology ,ATPase ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,macromolecular substances ,complex mixtures ,Nucleotide exchange factor ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,ATP hydrolysis ,Chaperone (protein) ,polycyclic compounds ,biology.protein ,Immunoglobulin heavy chain ,Nucleotide ,Protein folding - Abstract
Molecular chaperones and folding enzymes in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) associate with the newly synthesized proteins to prevent their aggregation and help them fold and assemble correctly. Chaperone function of BiP, which is a Hsp70 homologue in ER, is controlled by the N-terminal ATPase domain. The ATPase activity of the ATPase domain is affected by regulatory factors. BAP was identified as a nucleotide exchange factor of BiP (Grp78), which exchanges ADP with ATP in the ATPase domain of BiP This study presents whether BAP can influence folding of a protein, immunoglobulin heavy chain that is bound to BiP tightly. We first examined which nucleotide of ADP and ATP affects on BAP binding to BiP The data showed that endogenous BAP of HEK293 cells prefers ADP for binding to BiP in vitro, suggesting that BAP first releases ADP from the ATPase domain in order to exchange with ATP. Immunoglobulin heavy chain, an unfolded protein substrate, was released from BiP in the presence of BAP but not in the presence of ERdj3, which is another regulatory factor for BiP accelerating the rate of ATP hydrolysis of BiP The ADP-releasing function of BAP was, therefore, believed to be responsible for immunoglobulin heavy chain release from BiP. Grp170, another Hsp70 homologue in ER, did not co-precipited with BAP from -metabolic labeled HEK293 lysate containing both overexpressed Grp170 and BAP. These data suggested that BAP has no specificity to Grp170 although the ATPase domains of Grp170 and BiP are homologous each other.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF