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Chaperones assist the protein folding in all organisms. They do this by interacting in different subsystems that targets different problems of the folding pathway. | Chaperones assist the protein folding in all organisms. They do this by interacting in different subsystems that targets different problems of the folding pathway. | ||
− | This year we focused on the GroE-system, and more specifically the chaperone GroES. GroES is a co-chaperone that is known to interact with the GroEL chaperone, and turn misfolded and unfolded proteins into natively folded proteins. However, it is hypothesised that GroES | + | This year we focused on the GroE-system, and more specifically the chaperone GroES. GroES is a co-chaperone that is known to interact with the GroEL chaperone, and turn misfolded and unfolded proteins into natively folded proteins. However, it is hypothesised that GroES can interact with a substrate protein on its own. The thought being that GroES acts as a holdas and there by prohibits unfolded proteins from interacting with aggregates. |
</h4> | </h4> | ||
<h2><img class="responsive-img center-margin" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/2/21/T--Linkoping_Sweden--substratgroe.png" alt="GroESmechanism" style="width:60%"</h2> | <h2><img class="responsive-img center-margin" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/2/21/T--Linkoping_Sweden--substratgroe.png" alt="GroESmechanism" style="width:60%"</h2> |
Revision as of 13:47, 17 October 2018