Litcius/Paper detail

Co-translational ribosome pairing enables native assembly of misfolding-prone subunits

Florian Wruck, Jaro Schmitt, Katharina Till, Kai Fenzl, Matilde Bertolini, Frank Tippmann, Alexandros Katranidis, Bernd Bukau, Günter Krämer, Sander J. Tans

2025Nature Communications10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Protein complexes are pivotal to most cellular processes. Emerging evidence indicating dimer assembly by pairs of ribosomes suggests yet unknown folding mechanisms involving two nascent chains. Here, we show that co-translational ribosome pairing allows their nascent chains to 'chaperone each other', thus enabling the formation of coiled-coil homodimers from subunits that misfold individually. We developed an integrated single-molecule fluorescence and force spectroscopy approach to probe the folding and assembly of two nascent chains extending from nearby ribosomes, using the intermediate filament lamin as a model system. Ribosome proximity during early translation stages is found to be critical: when interactions between nascent chains are inhibited or delayed, they become trapped in stable misfolded states that are no longer assembly-competent. Conversely, early interactions allow the two nascent chains to nucleate native-like quaternary structures that grow in size and stability as translation advances. We conjecture that protein folding mechanisms enabled by ribosome cooperation are more broadly relevant to intermediate filaments and other protein classes.

Topics & Concepts

RibosomeProtein foldingTranslation (biology)PairingComputational biologyFolding (DSP implementation)ChemistryBiologyCell biologyGeneticsRNAPhysicsMessenger RNAGeneQuantum mechanicsSuperconductivityElectrical engineeringEngineeringRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Research and Splicing