The TRiC/CCT Chaperonin and Its Role in Uncontrolled Proliferation

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The cell cycle is a sophisticated space-time regulated mechanism where a wide variety of protein modules and complexes associate functioning in a concerted manner to regulate and transfer the genetic material to daughter cells. CCT (chaperonin containing TCP-1, also known as TRiC) is a molecular machine that forms a high molecular weight complex (1000 KDa). CCT is emerging as a key molecule during mitosis due to its essential role in the folding of many important proteins involved in cell division (Cdh1, Plk1, p27, Cdc20, PP2a regulatory subunits, tubulin or actin) suggesting its involvement in uncontrolled proliferation. The assembly is formed by eight different subunits called CCT alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon, zeta, eta and theta in mammals corresponding to CCT1-8 in yeast. CCT/TRiC is organized in a unique intra- and inter-ring arrangement. The chaperonin monomers share a common domain structure including an equatorial domain, which contains all the inter-ring contacts, most of the intra-ring contacts and the ATP binding site, whose binding and hydrolysis triggers the conformational changes that take place during the functional cycle. All chaperonins display an open substrate-receptive conformation, where the unfolded protein is recognized and trapped, and a closed conformation where the substrate is isolated from the bulk of the intracellular environment. In this chapter we discuss the complex set of intra- and inter-ring allosteric signals during chaperonin function.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHSF1 and Molecular Chaperones in Biology and Cancer
EditorsMarc Laurence Mendillo, David Pincus, Ruth ScherzShouval
Number of pages20
PublisherSpringer
Publication date2020
Pages21-40
ISBN (Print)978-3-030-40203-7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020
SeriesAdvances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
Volume1243
ISSN0065-2598

    Research areas

  • Chaperonines, Molecular machines, Cell cycle, Protein folding, Allosterism, ATP hydrolysis, Protein-protein interaction, X-ray, cryoEM, ANAPHASE-PROMOTING COMPLEX, EUKARYOTIC CHAPERONIN, MOLECULAR CHAPERONE, CYTOPLASMIC CHAPERONIN, CYTOSOLIC CHAPERONIN, CCT CHAPERONIN, SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE, CONFORMATIONAL-CHANGES, CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE, LID CLOSURE

ID: 249860706