4.6 Article

Roles of the N- and C-terminal sequences in Hsp27 self-association and chaperone activity

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 122-133

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pro.761

Keywords

Hsp27; heat shock proteins; oligomerization; chaperone activity; light scattering; FRET; analytical ultracentrifugation; HSPB1

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MCP-14021]
  2. Canada Research Chair
  3. Michael Smith Foundation

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The small heat shock protein 27 (Hsp27 or HSPB1) is an oligomeric molecular chaperone in vitro that is associated with several neuromuscular, neurological, and neoplastic diseases. Although aspects of Hsp27 biology are increasingly well known, understanding of the structural basis for these involvements or of the functional properties of the protein remains limited. As all 11 human small heat shock proteins (sHsps) possess an alpha-crystallin domain, their varied functional and physiological characteristics must arise from contributions of their nonconserved sequences. To evaluate the role of two such sequences in Hsp27, we have studied three Hsp27 truncation variants to assess the functional contributions of the nonconserved N- and C- terminal sequences. The N-terminal variants Delta 114 and Delta 124 exhibit little chaperone activity, somewhat slower but temperature-dependent subunit exchange kinetics, and temperature-independent self-association with formation of smaller oligomers than wild-type Hsp27. The C-terminal truncation variants exhibit chaperone activity at 40 degrees C but none at 20 degrees C, limited subunit exchange, and temperature-independent self-association with an oligomer distribution at 40 degrees C that is very similar to that of wild-type Hsp27. We conclude that more of the N-terminal sequence than simply the WPDF domain is essential in the formation of larger, native-like oligomers after binding of substrate and/or in binding of Hsp27 to unfolding peptides. On the other hand, the intrinsically flexible C-terminal region drives subunit exchange and thermally-induced unfolding, both of which are essential to chaperone activity at low temperature and are linked to the temperature dependence of Hsp27 self-association.

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