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The Yeast AAA+ Chaperone Hsp104 Is Part of a Network That Links the Actin Cytoskeleton with the Inheritance of Damaged Proteins
Authors:Peter Tessarz  Michael Schwarz  Axel Mogk  Bernd Bukau
Institution:Universität Heidelberg, Zentrum fuer Molekulare Biologie Heidelberg, DKFZ-ZMBH Alliance, Im Neuenheimer Feld 282, Heidelberg D-69120, Germany,1. Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Am Klopferspitz 18, 82152 Martinsried/Munich, Germany2.
Abstract:The yeast AAA+ chaperone Hsp104 is essential for the development of thermotolerance and for the inheritance of prions. Recently, Hsp104, together with the actin cytoskeleton, has been implicated in the asymmetric distribution of carbonylated proteins. Here, we investigated the interplay between Hsp104 and actin by using a dominant-negative variant of Hsp104 (HAP/ClpP) that degrades substrate proteins instead of remodeling them. Coexpression of HAP/ClpP causes defects in morphology and the actin cytoskeleton. Taking a candidate approach, we identified Spa2, a member of the polarisome complex, as an Hsp104 substrate. Furthermore, we provided genetic evidence that links Spa2 and Hsp104 to Hof1, a member of the cytokinesis machinery. Spa2 and Hof1 knockout cells are affected in the asymmetric distribution of damaged proteins, suggesting that Hsp104, Spa2, and Hof1 are members of a network controlling the inheritance of carbonylated proteins.The ensemble of molecular chaperones and proteases constitutes the cellular system that repairs and eliminates misfolded proteins. The activity of this system ensures not only the recovery of cells from protein-damaging stress conditions, but also the maintenance of protein homeostasis under normal growth conditions. The concomitant involvement of members of the Hsp70 and Hsp90 chaperone families in stress-related, regulatory, and housekeeping functions allows the integration of environmental stimuli into regulatory networks (4, 24, 39, 40). However, it has remained unclear whether other chaperones are also involved in regulatory processes.One chaperone which so far has been connected only to stress-related protein quality functions is the oligomeric AAA+ chaperone Hsp104 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Hsp104 is essential for the development of thermotolerance by reactivating aggregated proteins after severe stress conditions and for prion propagation by severing prion fibrils (31). Yeast cells, when grown at 30°C, harbor approximately 5,000 copies of Hsp104 hexamers per cell, a number that is minor compared to other cytosolic chaperone machineries (e.g., Hsp70 and Hsp90) that are involved in general protein-folding events (10). The known cellular functions of Hsp104, however, cannot provide a rationale for the determined Hsp104 levels, since protein aggregation is hardly detectable in yeast cells at 30°C even in mutant cells lacking Hsp104 function. Furthermore, yeast prions occur de novo at a very low rate of 10−6 per cell. In consequence, both well-characterized Hsp104 activities are barely required at 30°C, suggesting that Hsp104 has additional, so far unknown housekeeping functions. On the other hand, an S. cerevisiae hsp104 knockout exhibits no obvious phenotype at 30°C (27), giving no clues to a potential involvement of Hsp104 in other cellular processes.Recently, Hsp104 was demonstrated to influence the asymmetric distribution of oxidatively damaged (carbonylated) proteins (8). It remained unclear whether the role of Hsp104 in this process relies on its known activities in protein quality control or on an unknown involvement in other cellular processes. Here, we provide evidence that Hsp104 is part of a network that controls the inheritance of damaged proteins under physiological growth conditions.
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