Isomerase-independent chaperone function of cyclophilin ensures aggregation prevention of adenosine kinase both in vitro and under in vivo conditions

Chakraborty, Anutosh ; Sen, Banibrata ; Datta, Rupak ; Datta, Alok K. (2004) Isomerase-independent chaperone function of cyclophilin ensures aggregation prevention of adenosine kinase both in vitro and under in vivo conditions Biochemistry, 43 (37). pp. 11862-11872. ISSN 0006-2960

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Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bi049490o

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi049490o

Abstract

Using inactive aggregates of adenosine kinase (AdK) from Leishmania donovani as the model substrate, we recently demonstrated that a cyclophilin (LdCyP) from the same source in an isomerase-independent fashion reactivated the enzyme in vitro by disaggregating its inactive oligomers [Chakraborty et al. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 47451-47460]. Besides disrupting preformed aggregates, LdCyP also prevents reaggregation of the newly formed active protein that is generated after productive refolding from its urea-denatured state. To investigate possible physiological implications of such phenomena, a unique expression system that simultaneously induces both AdK and LdCyP in naturally AdK-deficient Escherichia coli, was developed. Both in vitro and in vivo experiments revealed that oligomerization is an inherent property of this particular enzyme. In vivo protein cross-linking studies, activity determination analysis and Ado phosphorylation experiments carried out in cells coexpressing both the proteins unequivocally demonstrated that, similar to the phenomena observed in vitro, aggregates of the enzyme formed in vivo are able to interact with both LdCyP and its N-terminal truncated form (N22-88DEL LdCyP) in a crowded intracellular environment, resulting in aggregation prevention and reactivation of the enzyme. Our results indicate that the isomerase-independent chaperone function of LdCyP, detected in vitro, participates in vivo as well to keep aggregation-prone proteins in a monomeric state. Furthermore, analogous to yeast/bacterial two-hybrid systems, development of this simple coexpression system may help in the confirmation of interaction of two proteins under simulated in vivo conditions.

Item Type:Article
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ID Code:86517
Deposited On:10 Mar 2012 12:56
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