Islamabad, Jan 10 : Young unmarried girls used to be
accompanied by chaperones at social events. Their task was to prevent their
charge from having undesirable romantic rendezvous with young boys.
The
term "molecular chaperones" is used in cellular biology to refer to a group of
proteins which prevent undesirable contact between other proteins. Such contact
can be particularly dangerous during protein production, a process carried out
by the ribosome in the cell.
The ribosome functions like a knitting
spool: 20 different amino acids are threaded together like loops of thread in
various sequences and amounts. The emerging amino acid chain disappears into a
tunnel and does not come back out until it has reached a certain
length.
A research group led by Freiburg biochemist Prof. Dr. Sabine
Rospert studies how the chaperones at the end of the ribosomal tunnel influence
the fate of newly synthesized proteins and how their functioning is coordinated
in time and space. In 2005, the group discovered the chaperone ZRF1 at the end
of the human ribosomal tunnel. ZRF1 exhibits structural characteristics which
are otherwise typical only of proteins which influence the chromatin structure.
Chromatin is a combination of DNA, histone, and other proteins in the nucleus of
the cell. The DNA contains the information necessary for letting a ribosome know
which amino acid chain it should produce. Gene segments of the DNA are
translated into transcripts for this purpose, which then leave the nucleus in
order to program the ribosomes for the synthesis of certain proteins.
Why
does a chaperone sitting at the end of the ribosomal tunnel need to possess
characteristics that can influence the chromatin structure in the nucleus?
Thanks to the cooperation between Sabine Rospert's team in Freiburg and a group
of researchers working under the biologist Prof. Dr. Luciano Di Croce at the
Centre for Genomic Regulation in Barcelona, Spain, scientists are now a step
closer to answering this question.
Di Croche investigates protein
complexes which influence the chromatin structure and thus also the production
of transcripts. Reversible modifications to histone proteins in the chromatin
play a decisive role in these processes. The experiments conducted by the
scientists have revealed that ZRF1 influences the modification of a histone
protein, thus allowing the production of a specific group of transcripts for a
limited period of time.
These results, published in the journal Nature,
constitute an important step in the quest to understand the connection between
the function of ZRF1 in the ribosome and in the chromatin. The discovery that
this molecular chaperone has a dual function, both in the process of
transcription and in the translation of the transcripts into proteins at a
different place and time, is important initial evidence for the assumption that
there is a link between the regulation of the two
processes.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Proteins need chaperones: Newly discovered processes in production of proteins described
Proteins need chaperones: Newly discovered processes in production of proteins described
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