Proteome-wide determinants of co-translational chaperone binding in bacteria

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

Carla Verónica Galmozzi (University of Heidelberg, University of Seville)

Frank Tippmann (University of Heidelberg)

Florian Wruck (AMOLF Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics)

Josef Johannes Auburger (University of Heidelberg)

Ilia Kats (German Cancer Research Center, University of Heidelberg)

Manuel Guennigmann (University of Heidelberg)

Katharina Till (AMOLF Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics)

Edward P. O Brien (The Pennsylvania State University)

Sander J. Tans (Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft, AMOLF Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics, TU Delft - BN/Sander Tans Lab)

Günter Kramer (University of Heidelberg)

Bernd Bukau (University of Heidelberg)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-59067-9 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Journal title
Nature Communications
Issue number
1
Volume number
16
Pages (from-to)
4361
Downloads counter
182
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Abstract

Chaperones are essential to the co-translational folding of most proteins. However, the principles of co-translational chaperone interaction throughout the proteome are poorly understood, as current methods are restricted to few substrates and cannot capture nascent protein folding or chaperone binding sites, precluding a comprehensive understanding of productive and erroneous protein biosynthesis. Here, by integrating genome-wide selective ribosome profiling, single-molecule tools, and computational predictions using AlphaFold we show that the binding of the main E. coli chaperones involved in co-translational folding, Trigger Factor (TF) and DnaK correlates with "unsatisfied residues" exposed on nascent partial folds - residues that have begun to form tertiary structure but cannot yet form all native contacts due to ongoing translation. This general principle allows us to predict their co-translational binding across the proteome based on sequence only, which we verify experimentally. The results show that TF and DnaK stably bind partially folded rather than unfolded conformers. They also indicate a synergistic action of TF guiding intra-domain folding and DnaK preventing premature inter-domain contacts, and reveal robustness in the larger chaperone network (TF, DnaK, GroEL). Given the complexity of translation, folding, and chaperone functions, our predictions based on general chaperone binding rules indicate an unexpected underlying simplicity.