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1.
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to evaluate the effects on structure and function of selected substitutions within and N-terminal to the core "alpha-crystallin" domain of the small heat-shock protein (sHsp) and molecular chaperone, human alphaB-crystallin. Five alphaB-crystallin mutants containing single amino acid substitutions within the core alpha-crystallin domain displayed a modest decrease in chaperone activity in aggregation assays in vitro and in protecting cell viability of E. coli at 50 degrees C in vivo. In contrast, seven alphaB-crystallin mutants containing substitutions N-terminal to the core alpha-crystallin domain generally resembled wild-type alphaB-crystallin in chaperone activity in vitro and in vivo. Size-exclusion chromatography, ultraviolet circular dichroism spectroscopy and limited proteolysis were used to evaluate potential structural changes in the 12 alphaB-crystallin mutants. The secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures of mutants within and N-terminal to the core alpha-crystallin domain were similar to wild-type alphaB-crystallin. SDS-PAGE patterns of chymotryptic digestion were also similar in the mutant and wild-type proteins, indicating that the mutations did not introduce structural modifications that altered the exposure of proteolytic cleavage sites in alphaB-crystallin. On the basis of the similarities between the sequences of human alphaB-crystallin and the sHsp Mj HSP16.5, the only sHsp for which there exists high resolution structural information, a three-dimensional model for alphaB-crystallin was constructed. The mutations at sites within the core alpha-crystallin domain of alphaB-crystallin identify regions that may be important for the molecular chaperone functions of sHsps.  相似文献   

2.
The cytoskeleton has a unique property such that changes of conformation result in polymerization into a filamentous form. alphaB-Crystallin, a small heat shock protein (sHsp), has chaperone activities for various substrates, including proteins constituting the cytoskeleton, such as actin; intermediate filament; and tubulin. However, it is not clear whether the "alpha-crystallin domain" common to sHsps also has chaperone activity for the protein cytoskeleton. To investigate the possibility that the C-terminal alpha-crystallin domain of alpha-crystallin has the aggregation-preventing ability for tubulin, we constructed an N-terminal domain deletion mutant of alphaB-crystallin. We characterized its structural properties and chaperone activities. Far-ultraviolet (UV) circular dichroism measurements showed that secondary structure in the alpha-crystallin domain of the deletion mutant is maintained. Ultracentrifuge analysis of molecular masses indicated that the deletion mutant formed smaller oligomers than did the full-length protein. Chaperone activity assays demonstrated that the N-terminal domain deletion mutant suppressed heat-induced aggregation of tubulin well. Comparison of chaperone activities for 2 other substrates (citrate synthase and alcohol dehydrogenase) showed that it was less effective in the suppression of their aggregation. These results show that alphaB-crystallin recognizes a variety of substrates and especially that alpha-crystallin domain binds free cytoskeletal proteins. We suggest that this feature would be advantageous in its functional role of holding or folding multiple proteins denatured simultaneously under stress conditions.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Several small heat shock proteins contain a well conserved alpha-crystallin domain, flanked by an N-terminal domain and a C-terminal extension, both of which vary in length and sequence. The structural and functional role of the C-terminal extension of small heat shock proteins, particularly of alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins, is not well understood. We have swapped the C-terminal extensions between alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins and generated two novel chimeric proteins, alphaABc and alphaBAc. We have investigated the domain-swapped chimeras for structural and functional alterations. We have used thermal and non-thermal models of protein aggregation and found that the chimeric alphaB with the C-terminal extension of alphaA-crystallin, alphaBAc, exhibits dramatically enhanced chaperone-like activity. Interestingly, however, the chimeric alphaA with the C-terminal extension of alphaB-crystallin, alphaABc, has almost lost its activity. Pyrene solubilization and bis-1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate binding studies show that alphaBAc exhibits more solvent-exposed hydrophobic pockets than alphaA, alphaB, or alphaABc. Significant tertiary structural changes are revealed by tryptophan fluorescence and near-UV CD studies upon swapping the C-terminal extensions. The far-UV CD spectrum of alphaBAc differs from that of alphaB-crystallin whereas that of alphaABc overlaps with that of alphaA-crystallin. Gel filtration chromatography shows alteration in the size of the proteins upon swapping the C-terminal extensions. Our study demonstrates that the unstructured C-terminal extensions play a crucial role in the structure and chaperone activity, in addition to generally believed electrostatic "solubilizer" function.  相似文献   

5.
Nine proteins have been assigned to date to the superfamily of mammalian small heat shock proteins (sHsps): Hsp27 (HspB1, Hsp25), myotonic dystrophy protein kinase-binding protein (MKBP) (HspB2), HspB3, alphaA-crystallin (HspB4), alphaB-crystallin (HspB5), Hsp20 (p20, HspB6), cardiovascular heat shock protein (cvHsp [HspB7]), Hsp22 (HspB8), and HspB9. The most pronounced structural feature of sHsps is the alpha-crystallin domain, a conserved stretch of approximately 80 amino acid residues in the C-terminal half of the molecule. Using the alpha-crystallin domain of human Hsp27 as query in a BLAST search, we found sequence similarity with another mammalian protein, the sperm outer dense fiber protein (ODFP). ODFP occurs exclusively in the axoneme of sperm cells. Multiple alignment of human ODFP with the other human sHsps reveals that the primary structure of ODFP fits into the sequence pattern that is typical for this protein superfamily: alpha-crystallin domain (conserved), N-terminal domain (less conserved), central region (variable), and C-terminal tails (variable). In a phylogenetic analysis of 167 proteins of the sHsp superfamily, using Bayesian inference, mammalian ODFPs form a clade and are nested within previously identified sHsps, some of which have been implicated in cytoskeletal functions. Both the multiple alignment and the phylogeny suggest that ODFP is the 10th member of the superfamily of mammalian sHsps, and we propose to name it HspB10 in analogy with the other sHsps. The C-terminal tail of HspB10 has a remarkable low-complexity structure consisting of 10 repeats of the motif C-X-P. A BLAST search using the C-terminal tail as query revealed similarity with sequence elements in a number of Drosophila male sperm proteins, and mammalian type I keratins and cornifin-alpha. Taken together, the following findings suggest a specialized role of HspB10 in cytoskeleton: (1) the exclusive location in sperm cell tails, (2) the phylogenetic relationship with sHsps implicated in cytoskeletal functions, and (3) the partial similarity with cytoskeletal proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Oligomerization into multimeric complexes is a prerequisite for the chaperone function of almost all alpha-crystallin type heat shock proteins (alpha-Hsp), but the molecular details of complex assembly are poorly understood. The alpha-Hsp proteins from Bradyrhizobium japonicum are suitable bacterial models for structure-function studies of these ubiquitous stress proteins. They fall into two distinct classes, A and B, display chaperone activity in vitro and form oligomers of approximately 24 subunits. We constructed 19 derivatives containing truncations or point mutations within the N- and C-terminal regions and analyzed them by gel filtration, citrate synthase assay and coaffinity purification. Truncation of more than the initial few amino acids of the N-terminal region led to the formation of distinct dimeric to octameric structures devoid of chaperone activity. In the C-terminal extension, integrity of an isoleucine-X-isoleucine (I-X-I) motif was imperative for alpha-Hsp functionality. This I-X-I motif is one of the characteristic consensus motifs of the alpha-Hsp family, and here we provide experimental evidence of its structural and functional importance. alpha-Hsp proteins lacking the C-terminal extension were inactive, but still able to form dimers. Here, we demonstrate that the central alpha-crystallin domain alone is not sufficient for dimerization. Additional residues at the end of the N-terminal region were required for the assembly of two subunits.  相似文献   

7.
Mutations in the alpha-crystallin domain of 4 of the small heat shock proteins (sHsp) (Hsp27/HspB1, alphaA-crystallin/ HspB4, alphaB-crystallin/HspB5, and HspB8) are responsible for dominant inherited diseases in humans. One such mutation at a highly conserved arginine residue was shown to cause major conformational defects and intracellular aggregation of alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins and HspB8. Here, we studied the effect of this Arg mutation on the structure and function of Hsp27. Chinese hamster Hsp27 with Arg148 replaced by Gly (Hsp27R148G) formed dimers in vitro and in vivo, which contrasted with the 12- or 24-subunit oligomers formed by the wild-type protein (Hsp27WT). Despite these alterations, Hsp27R148G had a chaperone activity almost as high as Hsp27WT. The dimers of Hsp27R148G did not further deoligomerize on phosphorylation and like the dimers formed by phosphorylated Hsp27WT were not affected by the deletion of the N-terminal WD/EPF (single letter amino acid code) motif, suggesting that mutation of Arg148, deletion of the N-terminal WD/EPF motif, and phosphorylation of Ser90 may produce similar structural perturbations. Nevertheless, the structure of Hsp27R148G appeared unstable, and the mutated protein accumulated as aggregates in many cells. Both a lower basal level of phosphorylation of Hsp27R148G and the coexpression of Hsp27WT could reduce the frequency of formation of these aggregates, suggesting possible mechanisms regulating the onset of the sHsp-mediated inherited diseases.  相似文献   

8.
Eye lens alpha-crystallin is a member of the small heat shock protein (sHSP) family and forms large multimeric structures. Earlier studies have shown that it can act like a molecular chaperone and form a stable complex with partially unfolded proteins. We have observed that prior binding of the hydrophobic protein melittin to alpha-crystallin diminishes its chaperone-like activity toward denaturing alcohol dehydrogenase, suggesting the presence of mutually exclusive sites for these proteins in alpha-crystallin. To investigate the mechanism of the interaction between alpha-crystallin and substrate proteins, we determined the melittin-binding sites in alpha-crystallin by cross-linking studies. Localization of melittin-binding sites in alpha-crystallin resulted in the identification of RTLGPFYPSR and FVIFLDVKHFSPEDLTVK of alphaA-crystallin and FSVNLDVK of alphaB-crystallin as the chaperone sites. Of these sites, FVIFLDVKHFSPEDLTVK and FSVNLDVK were identified earlier as 1,1'-bi(4-anilino) naphthalene-5,5'-disulfonic acid (bis-ANS)-binding hydrophobic sites. Here we also report the synthesis and characterization of the peptide, KFVIFLDVKHFSPEDLTVK, having the melittin as well as bis-ANS-binding sequence of alphaA-crystallin. We show that this peptide has characteristics similar to that of alphaA-crystallin by in vitro thermal aggregation assay, gel filtration study, CD spectroscopy, and bis-ANS interaction studies. The peptide sequence corresponds to the beta3 and beta4 region present in the alpha-crystallin domain of sHSP 16.5. We hypothesize that the alpha-crystallin domain in other sHSPs may have a similar function and would likely possess the anti-aggregation property even when separated from the native protein.  相似文献   

9.
The alpha-crystallin-related, small heat shock proteins (sHsps), despite their overall variability in sequence, have discrete regions of conserved sequence that are involved in structural organization, as well as nonconserved regions that may perform similar roles in each protein. Recent X-ray diffraction analyses of an archeal and a plant sHsp have revealed both similarities and differences in how they are organized, suggesting that there is variability, particularly in the oligomeric organization of sHsps. As an adjunct to crystallographic analysis of sHsp structure, we employed the yeast 2-hybrid system to detect interactions between peptide regions of the sHsp of Neurospora crassa, Hsp30. We found that the conserved alpha-crystallin domain can be divided into N-terminal and C-terminal subdomains that interact strongly with one another. This interaction likely represents the tertiary contacts of the monomer that were visualized in the crystallographic structures of MjHsp16.5 and wheat Hsp16.9. The conserved sHsp monomeric fold is apparently determined by these regions of conserved sequence. We found that the C-terminal portion of the alpha-crystallin domain also interacts with itself in 2-hybrid assays; however, this interaction requires peptide extension into the semiconserved carboxyl tail. This C-terminal association may represent a principal contact site between dimers that contributes to higher-order assembly, as seen for the crystallized sHsps.  相似文献   

10.
McHaourab HS  Lin YL  Spiller BW 《Biochemistry》2012,51(25):5105-5112
How does the sequence of a single small heat shock protein (sHSP) assemble into oligomers of different sizes? To gain insight into the underlying structural mechanism, we determined the crystal structure of an engineered variant of Methanocaldococcus jannaschii Hsp16.5 wherein a 14 amino acid peptide from human heat shock protein 27 (Hsp27) was inserted at the junction of the N-terminal region and the α-crystallin domain. In response to this insertion, the oligomer shell expands from 24 to 48 subunits while maintaining octahedral symmetry. Oligomer rearrangement does not alter the fold of the conserved α-crystallin domain nor does it disturb the interface holding the dimeric building block together. Rather, the flexible C-terminal tail of Hsp16.5 changes its orientation relative to the α-crystallin domain which enables alternative packing of dimers. This change in orientation preserves a peptide-in-groove interaction of the C-terminal tail with an adjacent β-sandwich, thereby holding the assembly together. The interior of the expanded oligomer, where substrates presumably bind, retains its predominantly nonpolar character relative to the outside surface. New large windows in the outer shell provide increased access to these substrate-binding regions, thus accounting for the higher affinity of this variant to substrates. Oligomer polydispersity regulates sHSPs chaperone activity in vitro and has been implicated in their physiological roles. The structural mechanism of Hsp16.5 oligomer flexibility revealed here, which is likely to be highly conserved across the sHSP superfamily, explains the relationship between oligomer expansion observed in disease-linked mutants and changes in chaperone activity.  相似文献   

11.
HSV-2 R1, the R1 subunit of herpes simplex virus (HSV) ribonucleotide reductase, protects cells against apoptosis. Here, we report the presence in HSV-2 R1 of a stretch exhibiting similarity to the alpha-crystallin domain of the small heat shock proteins, a domain known to be important for oligomerization and cytoprotective activities of these proteins. Also, the HSV-2 R1 protein, which forms multimeric structures in the absence of nucleotide, displayed chaperone ability as good as Hsp27 in a thermal denaturation assay using citrate synthase. In contrast, mammalian R1, which does not contain an alpha-crystallin domain, has neither chaperone nor anti-apoptotic activity. Thus, we propose that the chaperone activity of HSV-2 R1 could play an important role in viral pathogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
alpha-Crystallin, a heteromultimeric protein made up of alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins, functions as a molecular chaperone in preventing the aggregation of proteins. We have shown earlier that structural perturbation of alpha-crystallin can enhance its chaperone-like activity severalfold. The two subunits of alpha-crystallin have extensive sequence homology and individually display chaperone-like activity. We have investigated the chaperone-like activity of alphaA- and alphaB-crystallin homoaggregates against thermal and nonthermal modes of aggregation. We find that, against a nonthermal mode of aggregation, alphaB-crystallin shows significant protective ability even at subphysiological temperatures, at which alphaA-crystallin or heteromultimeric alpha-crystallin exhibit very little chaperone-like activity. Interestingly, differences in the protective ability of these homoaggregates against the thermal aggregation of beta(L)-crystallin is negligible. To investigate this differential behavior, we have monitored the temperature-dependent structural changes in both the proteins using fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence quench-ing by acrylamide shows that the tryptophans in alphaB-crystallin are more accessible than the lone tryptophan in alphaA-crystallin even at 25 degrees C. Protein-bound 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate fluorescence demonstrates the higher solvent accessibility of hydrophobic surfaces on alphaB-crystallin. Circular dichroism studies show some tertiary structural changes in alphaA-crystallin above 50 degrees C. alphaB-crystallin, on the other hand, shows significant alteration of tertiary structure by 45 degrees C. Our study demonstrates that despite a high degree of sequence homology and their generally accepted structural similarity, alphaB-crystallin is much more sensitive to temperature-dependent structural perturbation than alphaA- or alpha-crystallin and shows differences in its chaperone-like properties. These differences appear to be relevant to temperature-dependent enhancement of chaperone-like activity of alpha-crystallin and indicate different roles for the two proteins both in alpha-crystallin heteroaggregate and as separate proteins under stress conditions.  相似文献   

13.
alphaB-crystallin, a member of the small heat-shock protein family and a major eye lens protein, is a high molecular mass assembly and can act as a molecular chaperone. We report a synchrotron radiation x-ray solution scattering study of a truncation mutant from the human alphaB-crystallin (alphaB57-157), a dimeric protein that comprises the alpha-crystallin domain of the alphaB-crystallin and retains a significant chaperone-like activity. According to the sequence analysis (more than 23% identity), the monomeric fold of the alpha-crystallin domain should be close to that of the small heat-shock protein from Methanococcus jannaschii (MjHSP16.5). The theoretical scattering pattern computed from the crystallographic model of the dimeric MjHSP16.5 deviates significantly from the experimental scattering by the alpha-crystallin domain, pointing to different quaternary structures of the two proteins. A rigid body modeling against the solution scattering data yields a model of the alpha-crystallin domain revealing a new dimerization interface. The latter consists of a strand-turn-strand motif contributed by each of the monomers, which form a four-stranded, antiparallel, intersubunit composite beta-sheet. This model agrees with the recent spin labeling results and suggests that the alphaB-crystallin is composed by flexible building units with an extended surface area. This flexibility may be important for biological activity and for the formation of alphaB-crystallin complexes of variable sizes and compositions.  相似文献   

14.
ClpB of Escherichia coli is an ATP-dependent ring-forming chaperone that mediates the resolubilization of aggregated proteins in cooperation with the DnaK chaperone system. ClpB belongs to the Hsp100/Clp subfamily of AAA+ proteins and is composed of an N-terminal domain and two AAA-domains that are separated by a "linker" region. Here we present a detailed structure-function analysis of ClpB, dissecting the individual roles of ClpB domains and conserved motifs in oligomerization, ATP hydrolysis, and chaperone activity. Our results show that ClpB oligomerization is strictly dependent on the presence of the C-terminal domain of the second AAA-domain, while ATP binding to the first AAA-domains stabilized the ClpB oligomer. Analysis of mutants of conserved residues in Walker A and B and sensor 2 motifs revealed that both AAA-domains contribute to the basal ATPase activity of ClpB and communicate in a complex manner. Chaperone activity strictly depends on ClpB oligomerization and the presence of a residual ATPase activity. The N-domain is dispensable for oligomerization and for the disaggregating activity in vitro and in vivo. In contrast the presence of the linker region, although not involved in oligomerization, is essential for ClpB chaperone activity.  相似文献   

15.
Small heat shock protein is a ubiquitous molecular chaperone, which consists of a non-conserved N-terminal region followed by a conserved alpha-crystallin domain. To understand the role of the N-terminal region, we constructed N-terminal truncation mutants of StHsp14.0, the sHsp from Sulfolobus tokodaii strain 7. All the mutants formed a stable oligomeric complex similar to that of the wild type. Electron microscopy and size exclusion chromatography-multiangle light scattering showed that the N-terminal region should locate in the center of the oligomeric particle. The mutants exhibited reduced chaperone activity for the protection of 3-isopropylmalate dehydrogenase from thermal aggregation. This reduction correlates with lowered subunit exchange efficiency. The oligomeric structure was retained even after incubation at 90 degrees C. These results suggest that the N-terminal region of StHsp14.0 functions in the thermally induced disassembly of the complex.  相似文献   

16.
Alpha-crystallin, a major structural protein of the lens can also function as a molecular chaperone by binding to unfolding substrate proteins. We have used a combination of limited proteolysis at low temperature, and mass spectrometry to identify the regions of alpha-crystallin directly involved in binding to the structurally compromised substrate, reduced alpha-lactalbumin. In the presence of trypsin, alpha-crystallin which had been pre-incubated with substrate showed markedly reduced proteolysis at the C-terminus compared with a control, indicating that the bound substrate restricted access of trypsin to R157, the main cleavage site. Chymotrypsin was able to cleave at residues in both the N- and C-terminal domains. In the presence of substrate, alpha-crystallin showed markedly reduced proteolysis at four sites in the N-terminal domain when compared with the control. Minor differences in cleavage were observed within the C-terminal domain suggesting that the N-terminal region of alpha-crystallin contains the major substrate interaction sites.  相似文献   

17.
Small heat shock proteins (sHSPs) are a ubiquitous class of molecular chaperones that interacts with substrates to prevent their irreversible insolubilization during denaturation. How sHSPs interact with substrates remains poorly defined. To investigate the role of the conserved C-terminal alpha-crystallin domain versus the variable N-terminal arm in substrate interactions, we compared two closely related dodecameric plant sHSPs, Hsp18.1 and Hsp16.9, and four chimeras of these two sHSPs, in which all or part of the N-terminal arm was switched. The efficiency of substrate protection and formation of sHSP-substrate complexes by these sHSPs with three different model substrates, firefly luciferase, citrate synthase, and malate dehydrogenase (MDH) provide new insights into sHSP/substrate interactions. Results indicate that different substrates have varying affinities for different domains of the sHSP. For luciferase and citrate synthase, the efficiency of substrate protection was determined by the identity of the N-terminal arm in the chimeric proteins. In contrast, for MDH, efficient protection clearly required interactions with the alpha-crystallin domain in addition to the N-terminal arm. Furthermore, we show that sHSP-substrate complexes with varying stability and composition can protect substrate equally, and substrate protection is not correlated with sHSP oligomeric stability for all substrates. Protection of MDH by the dimeric chimera composed of the Hsp16.9 N-terminal arm and Hsp18.1 alpha-crystallin domain supports the model that a dimeric form of the sHSP can bind and protect substrate. In total, results demonstrate that sHSP-substrate interactions are complex, likely involve multiple sites on the sHSP, and vary depending on substrate.  相似文献   

18.
Small heat shock proteins protect cells from stress presumably by acting as molecular chaperones. Here we report on the functional characterization of a developmentally regulated, heat-inducible member of the Xenopus small heat shock protein family, Hsp30C. An expression vector containing the open reading frame of the Hsp30C gene was expressed in Escherichia coli. These bacterial cells displayed greater thermoresistance than wild type or plasmid-containing cells. Purified recombinant protein, 30C, was recovered as multimeric complexes which inhibited heat-induced aggregation of either citrate synthase or luciferase as determined by light scattering assays. Additionally, 30C attenuated but did not reverse heat-induced inactivation of enzyme activity. In contrast to an N-terminal deletion mutant, removal of the last 25 amino acids from the C-terminal end of 30C severely impaired its chaperone activity. Furthermore, heat-treated concentrated solutions of the C-terminal mutant formed nonfunctional complexes and precipitated from solution. Immunoblot and gel filtration analysis indicated that 30C binds with and maintains the solubility of luciferase preventing it from forming heat-induced aggregates. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments suggested that the carboxyl region is necessary for 30C to interact with target proteins. These results clearly indicate a molecular chaperone role for Xenopus Hsp30C and provide evidence that its activity requires the carboxyl terminal region.  相似文献   

19.
In all species studied to date, the function of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), a ubiquitous and evolutionarily conserved molecular chaperone, is inhibited selectively by the natural product drugs geldanamycin (GA) and radicicol. Crystal structures of the N-terminal region of yeast and human Hsp90 have revealed that these compounds interact with the chaperone in a Bergerat-type adenine nucleotide-binding fold shared throughout the gyrase, Hsp90, histidine kinase mutL (GHKL) superfamily of adenosine triphosphatases. To better understand the consequences of disrupting Hsp90 function in a genetically tractable multicellular organism, we exposed the soil-dwelling nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to GA under a variety of conditions designed to optimize drug uptake. Mutations in the gene encoding C elegans Hsp90 affect larval viability, dauer development, fertility, and life span. However, exposure of worms to GA produced no discernable phenotypes, although the amino acid sequence of worm Hsp90 is 85% homologous to that of human Hsp90. Consistent with this observation, we found that solid phase-immobilized GA failed to bind worm Hsp90 from worm protein extracts or when translated in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate system. Further, affinity precipitation studies using chimeric worm-vertebrate fusion proteins or worm C-terminal truncations expressed in reticulocyte lysate revealed that the conserved nucleotide-binding fold of worm Hsp90 exhibits the novel ability to bind adenosine triphosphate but not GA. Despite its unusual GA resistance, worm Hsp90 appeared fully functional when expressed in a vertebrate background. It heterodimerized with its vertebrate counterpart and showed no evidence of compromising its essential cellular functions. Heterologous expression of worm Hsp90 in tumor cells, however, did not render them GA resistant. These findings provide new insights into the nature of unusual N-terminal nucleotide-binding fold of Hsp90 and suggest that target-related drug resistance is unlikely to emerge in patients receiving GA-like chemotherapeutic agents.  相似文献   

20.
Hsp40s are ubiquitous, conserved proteins which function with molecular chaperones of the Hsp70 class. Sis1 is an essential Hsp40 of the cytosol of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, thought to be required for initiation of translation. We carried out a genetic analysis to determine the regions of Sis1 required to perform its key function(s). A C-terminal truncation of Sis1, removing 231 amino acids but retaining the N-terminal 121 amino acids encompassing the J domain and the glycine-phenylalanine-rich (G-F) region, was able to rescue the inviability of a Deltasis1 strain. The yeast cytosol contains other Hsp40s, including Ydj1. To determine which regions carried the critical determinants of Sis1 function, we constructed chimeric genes containing portions of SIS1 and YDJ1. A chimera containing the J domain of Sis1 and the G-F region of Ydj1 could not rescue the lethality of the Deltasis1 strain. However, a chimera with the J domain of Ydj1 and the G/F region of Sis1 could rescue the strain's lethality, indicating that the G-F region is a unique region required for the essential function of Sis1. However, a J domain is also required, as mutants expected to cause a disruption of the interaction of the J domain with Hsp70 are inviable. We conclude that the G-F region, previously thought only to be a linker or spacer region between the J domain and C-terminal regions of Hsp40s, is a critical determinant of Sis1 function.  相似文献   

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