4.6 Article

Heat shock protein 104 (HSP104) chaperones soluble Tau via a mechanism distinct from its disaggregase activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 294, Issue 13, Pages 4956-4965

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.005980

Keywords

chaperone; heat shock protein (HSP); amyloid; protein aggregation; Tau protein (Tau); holdase; HSP104; protein fibrils

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31470748]
  2. Major State Basic Research Development Program [2016YFA0501902]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences
  4. 1000 Talents Plan of China

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Heat shock protein 104 (HSP104) is a conserved AAA+ protein disaggregase, can disassemble the toxic aggregates formed by different amyloid proteins, and is protective in various animal models associated with amyloid-related diseases. Extensive studies have attempted to elucidate how HSP104 disassembles the aggregated form of clients. Here, we found that HSP104 exhibits a potent holdase activity that does not require energy, prevents the soluble form of amyloid clients from aggregating, and differs from HSP104's disaggregase activity. Using cryo-EM, NMR, and additional biophysical approaches, we found that HSP104 utilizes its small subdomain of nucleotide-binding domain 2 (ssNBD2) to capture the soluble amyloid client (K19 of Tau) independent of its ATP hydrolysis activity. Our results indicate that HSP104 utilizes two fundamental distinct mechanisms to chaperone different forms of amyloid client and highlight the important yet previously unappreciated function of ssNBD2 in chaperoning amyloid client and thereby preventing pathological aggregation.

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