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Bap (Sil1) regulates the molecular chaperone BiP by coupling release of nucleotide and substrate.

Mathias RosamDaniela KraderChristina NickelsJanine HochmairKatrin C BackGanesh AgamAnders BarthCathleen ZeymerJelle HendrixMarkus SchneiderIris AntesJochen ReinsteinDon C LambJohannes Buchner
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2018)
BiP is the endoplasmic member of the Hsp70 family. BiP is regulated by several co-chaperones including the nucleotide-exchange factor (NEF) Bap (Sil1 in yeast). Bap is a two-domain protein. The interaction of the Bap C-terminal domain with the BiP ATPase domain is sufficient for its weak NEF activity. However, stimulation of the BiP ATPase activity requires full-length Bap, suggesting a complex interplay of these two factors. Here, single-molecule FRET experiments with mammalian proteins reveal that Bap affects the conformation of both BiP domains, including the lid subdomain, which is important for substrate binding. The largely unstructured Bap N-terminal domain promotes the substrate release from BiP. Thus, Bap is a conformational regulator affecting both nucleotide and substrate interactions. The preferential interaction with BiP in its ADP state places Bap at a late stage of the chaperone cycle, in which it coordinates release of substrate and ADP, thereby resetting BiP for ATP and substrate binding.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • amino acid
  • heat shock
  • heat shock protein
  • endoplasmic reticulum
  • structural basis
  • living cells
  • atomic force microscopy
  • molecular dynamics
  • small molecule
  • quantum dots