Co-reporter:Rebecca L. Plimpton;Jorge Cuéllar;Aman Makaju;Takuma Aoba;Chun Wan J. Lai;Sarah Franklin;Andrew D. Mathis;José L. Carrascosa;John T. Prince;José M. Valpuesta
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 8 ) pp:2413-2418
Publication Date(Web):2015-02-24
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1419595112
G-protein signaling depends on the ability of the individual subunits of the G-protein heterotrimer to assemble into a functional
complex. Formation of the G-protein βγ (Gβγ) dimer is particularly challenging because it is an obligate dimer in which the
individual subunits are unstable on their own. Recent studies have revealed an intricate chaperone system that brings Gβ and
Gγ together. This system includes cytosolic chaperonin containing TCP-1 (CCT; also called TRiC) and its cochaperone phosducin-like
protein 1 (PhLP1). Two key intermediates in the Gβγ assembly process, the Gβ-CCT and the PhLP1–Gβ-CCT complexes, were isolated
and analyzed by a hybrid structural approach using cryo-electron microscopy, chemical cross-linking coupled with mass spectrometry,
and unnatural amino acid cross-linking. The structures show that Gβ interacts with CCT in a near-native state through interactions
of the Gγ-binding region of Gβ with the CCTγ subunit. PhLP1 binding stabilizes the Gβ fold, disrupting interactions with CCT
and releasing a PhLP1–Gβ dimer for assembly with Gγ. This view provides unique insight into the interplay between CCT and
a cochaperone to orchestrate the folding of a protein substrate.