Cell
Volume 159, Issue 5, 20 November 2014, Pages 1042-1055
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Article
The Structural Basis of Substrate Recognition by the Eukaryotic Chaperonin TRiC/CCT

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Highlights

  • NMR, mutagenesis, and modeling identify substrate-binding sites in chaperonin TRiC

  • Subunit-specific polar/hydrophobic patterns define substrate-binding specificity

  • TRiC subunit diversification enables combinatorial substrate-recognition code

  • TRiC-bound substrate topology determined by subunit-specific motif recognition

Summary

The eukaryotic chaperonin TRiC (also called CCT) is the obligate chaperone for many essential proteins. TRiC is hetero-oligomeric, comprising two stacked rings of eight different subunits each. Subunit diversification from simpler archaeal chaperonins appears linked to proteome expansion. Here, we integrate structural, biophysical, and modeling approaches to identify the hitherto unknown substrate-binding site in TRiC and uncover the basis of substrate recognition. NMR and modeling provided a structural model of a chaperonin-substrate complex. Mutagenesis and crosslinking-mass spectrometry validated the identified substrate-binding interface and demonstrate that TRiC contacts full-length substrates combinatorially in a subunit-specific manner. The binding site of each subunit has a distinct, evolutionarily conserved pattern of polar and hydrophobic residues specifying recognition of discrete substrate motifs. The combinatorial recognition of polypeptides broadens the specificity of TRiC and may direct the topology of bound polypeptides along a productive folding trajectory, contributing to TRiC’s unique ability to fold obligate substrates.

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Present address: Pacific Biosciences, 1380 Willow Street, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA