Bile salts are secreted into the gastrointestinal tract to aid in the absorption of lipids. In addition, bile salts show potent antimicro-bial activity in part by mediating bacterial protein unfolding and aggregation. Here, using a protein folding sensor, we made the surprising discovery that the Escherichia coli periplasmic glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P)-binding protein UgpB can serve, in the absence of its substrate, as a potent molecular chaperone that exhibits anti-aggregation activity against bile salt-induced protein aggre-gation. The substrate G3P, which is known to accumulate in the later compartments of the digestive system, triggers a functional switch between UgpB's activity as a molecular chaperone and its activity as a G3P transporter. A UgpB mutant unable to bind G3P is constitutively active as a chaperone, and its crystal structure shows that it contains a deep surface groove absent in the G3P-bound wild-type UgpB. Our work illustrates how evolution may be able to convert threats into signals that first activate and then inactivate a chaperone at the protein level in a manner that bypasses the need for ATP.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, C., Betschinger, P., Wu, K., Żyła, D. S., Glockshuber, R., & Bardwell, J. C. (2020). A metabolite binding protein moonlights as a bile‐responsive chaperone. The EMBO Journal, 39(20). https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.2019104231
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