Abstract: | α-Crystallin is a multimeric lenticular protein that has recently been shown to be expressed in several non-lenticular tissues as well. It is shown to prevent aggregation of non-native proteins as a molecular chaperone. By using a non-thermal aggregation model, we could show that this process is temperature-dependent. We investigated the chaperone-like activity of α-crystallin towards photo-induced aggregation of γ-crystallin, aggregation of insulin and on the refolding induced aggregation of β- and γ-crystallins. We observed that α-crystallin could prevent photo-aggregation of γ-crystallin and this chaperone-like activity of α-crystallin is enhanced several fold at temperatures above 30°C. This enhancement parallels the exposure of its hydrophobic surfaces as a function of temperature, probed using hydrophobic fluorescent probes such as pyrene and 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate. We, therefore, concluded that α-crystallin prevents the aggregation of other proteins by providing appropriately placed hydrophobic surfaces; a structural transition above 30°C involving enhanced or re-organized hydrophobic surfaces of α-crystallin is important for its chaperone-like activity. We also addressed the issue of conformational aspects of target proteins and found that their aggregation prone molten globule states bind to α-crystallin. We trace these developments and discuss some new lines that suggest the role of tertiary structural aspects in the chaperone process. |