4.5 Article

Structural and functional specificity of small heat shock protein HspB1 and HspB4, two cellular partners of HspB5: Role of the in vitro hetero-complex formation in chaperone activity

Journal

BIOCHIMIE
Volume 94, Issue 4, Pages 975-984

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biochi.2011.12.018

Keywords

Mammal small heat shock proteins; NspB1-HspB4-HspB5 oligomers; Chaperone activity; Sequence analysis; X-ray and light scattering

Funding

  1. French Ministry of Research
  2. 'University Pierre et Marie Curie', UPMC
  3. 'Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique', CNRS

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The ubiquitous small heat shock proteins are essential elements in cellular protection, through a molecular chaperone activity. Among them, human small heat shock protein HspB1, HspB4 and HspB5 are involved in oncogenesis, anti-apoptotic activity and lens transparency. Therefore, these proteins are potential therapeutic targets in many diseases. Their general chaperone activity is related to their dynamic and multiple oligomeric structures, which are still poorly understood. The tissue selective distribution of HspB1 and HspB4, two cellular partners of HspB5, suggests that these two proteins might have evolved to play distinct physiological functions. Moreover, hetero-complex formation seems to be favoured in vivo, yet the functional specificity of the HspB1 HspB5 and HspB4 HspB5 hetero-complexes compared to the homo-oligomers remains unclear in the stress response pathway. A powerful approach combining biochemistry, biophysics and bioinformatics, allowed us to compare the different assemblies, with a special emphasis on the structural data, subunit exchange properties, activity and sequence evolution. We showed that they all exhibit different properties, from structural organization in physiological versus stress conditions, to chaperone-like activity, whatever the level of sequence conservation. Subunit exchange kinetics leading to HspB1 HspB5 or HspB4 HspB5 hetero-complex formation is also different between these two complexes: HspB5 exchanges more rapidly subunits with HspB1 than with HspB4. The relative sequence conservation in the sHSP superfamily does hide important structural heterogeneity and flexibility, which confer an enlarged range of different surface necessary to efficiently form complexes with various stress-induced cellular targets. Our data suggest that the formation of hetero-complexes could be an original evolutionary strategy to gain new cellular functions. (C) 2012 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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