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Long-Lived Folding Intermediates Predominate the Targeting-Competent Secretome.

Structure (London, England : 1993) (2018-04-03)
Alexandra Tsirigotaki, Katerina E Chatzi, Marina Koukaki, Jozefien De Geyter, Athina G Portaliou, Georgia Orfanoudaki, Marios Frantzeskos Sardis, Morten Beck Trelle, Thomas J D Jørgensen, Spyridoula Karamanou, Anastassios Economou
RÉSUMÉ

Secretory preproteins carry signal peptides fused amino-terminally to mature domains. They are post-translationally targeted to cross the plasma membrane in non-folded states with the help of translocases, and fold only at their final destinations. The mechanism of this process of postponed folding is unknown, but is generally attributed to signal peptides and chaperones. We herein demonstrate that, during targeting, most mature domains maintain loosely packed folding intermediates. These largely soluble states are signal peptide independent and essential for translocase recognition. These intermediates are promoted by mature domain features: residue composition, elevated disorder, and reduced hydrophobicity. Consequently, a mature domain folds slower than its cytoplasmic structural homolog. Some mature domains could not evolve stable, loose intermediates, and hence depend on signal peptides for slow folding to the detriment of solubility. These unique features of secretory proteins impact our understanding of protein trafficking, folding, and aggregation, and thus place them in a distinct class.

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Urea-d4, 98 atom % D