4.6 Article

It takes a dimer to tango: Oligomeric small heat shock proteins dissociate to capture substrate

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 293, Issue 51, Pages 19511-19521

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.005421

Keywords

chaperone; small heat shock protein (sHsp); small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS); oligomerization; protein stability; protein design; protein engineering; chaperone efficiency; disulfides; dynamic light scattering (DLS); native mass spectrometry; substrate recognition; thermal stability; stress response; protein folding

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/J01835X/1, EP/P016499/1]
  2. National Institutes of Health [RO1 GM42762]
  3. BBSRC [BB/K004247/1, BB/J018082/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. EPSRC [EP/P016499/1, EP/J01835X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Small heat-shock proteins (sHsps) are ubiquitous molecular chaperones, and sHsp mutations or altered expression are linked to multiple human disease states. sHsp monomers assemble into large oligomers with dimeric substructure, and the dynamics of sHsp oligomers has led to major questions about the form that captures substrate, a critical aspect of their mechanism of action. We show here that substructural dimers of two plant dodecameric sHsps, Ta16.9 and homologous Ps18.1, are functional units in the initial encounter with unfolding substrate. We introduced inter-polypeptide disulfide bonds at the two dodecameric interfaces, dimeric and nondimeric, to restrict how their assemblies can dissociate. When disulfide-bonded at the nondimeric interface, mutants of Ta16.9 and Ps18.1 (TaCT-ACD and Ps(CT-ACD)) were inactive but, when reduced, had WT-like chaperone activity, demonstrating that dissociation at nondimeric interfaces is essential for sHsp activity. Moreover, the size of the TaCT-ACD and Ps(CT-ACD) covalent unit defined a new tetrahedral geometry for these sHsps, different from that observed in the Ta16.9 X-ray structure. Importantly, oxidized Ta-dimer (disulfide bonded at the dimeric interface) exhibited greatly enhanced ability to protect substrate, indicating that strengthening the dimeric interface increases chaperone efficiency. Temperature-induced size and secondary structure changes revealed that folded sHsp dimers interact with substrate and that dimer stability affects chaperone efficiency. These results yield a model in which sHsp dimers capture substrate before assembly into larger, heterogeneous sHsp-substrate complexes for substrate refolding or degradation, and suggest that tuning the strength of the dimer interface can be used to engineer sHsp chaperone efficiency.

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