4.6 Article

Physical Interaction between Bacterial Heat Shock Protein (Hsp) 90 and Hsp70 Chaperones Mediates Their Cooperative Action to Refold Denatured Proteins

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 9, Pages 6110-6119

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.524801

Keywords

Cyanobacteria; Heat Shock Protein; Hsp90; Molecular Chaperone; Protein Aggregation; DnaJ; DnaK; Hsp70; HtpG

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan [24580102]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [24580102] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Background: HtpG, a bacterial heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), is essential for thermotolerance in some prokaryotes. Results: HtpG functions with DnaK2/DnaJ2/GrpE to assist unfolding/folding of denatured proteins in both ATP-dependent and -independent fashions. Conclusion: The cooperative action of HtpG and DnaK2 might play a key role under stress. Significance: This might be the first sign of a prokaryotic Hsp90 foldosome. In eukaryotes, heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) is an essential ATP-dependent molecular chaperone that associates with numerous client proteins. HtpG, a prokaryotic homolog of Hsp90, is essential for thermotolerance in cyanobacteria, and in vitro it suppresses the aggregation of denatured proteins efficiently. Understanding how the non-native client proteins bound to HtpG refold is of central importance to comprehend the essential role of HtpG under stress. Here, we demonstrate by yeast two-hybrid method, immunoprecipitation assays, and surface plasmon resonance techniques that HtpG physically interacts with DnaJ2 and DnaK2. DnaJ2, which belongs to the type II J-protein family, bound DnaK2 or HtpG with submicromolar affinity, and HtpG bound DnaK2 with micromolar affinity. Not only DnaJ2 but also HtpG enhanced the ATP hydrolysis by DnaK2. Although assisted by the DnaK2 chaperone system, HtpG enhanced native refolding of urea-denatured lactate dehydrogenase and heat-denatured glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. HtpG did not substitute for DnaJ2 or GrpE in the DnaK2-assisted refolding of the denatured substrates. The heat-denatured malate dehydrogenase that did not refold by the assistance of the DnaK2 chaperone system alone was trapped by HtpG first and then transferred to DnaK2 where it refolded. Dissociation of substrates from HtpG was either ATP-dependent or -independent depending on the substrate, indicating the presence of two mechanisms of cooperative action between the HtpG and the DnaK2 chaperone system.

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