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ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions

Molecular chaperones are essential to maintain proteostasis. While the functions of intracellular molecular chaperones that oversee protein synthesis, folding and aggregation, are established, those specialized to work in the extracellular environment are less understood. Extracellular proteins resi...

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Autores principales: Leppert, Axel, Chen, Gefei, Lianoudaki, Danai, Williams, Chloe, Zhong, Xueying, Gilthorpe, Jonathan D., Landreh, Michael, Johansson, Jan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9278091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35900025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4378
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author Leppert, Axel
Chen, Gefei
Lianoudaki, Danai
Williams, Chloe
Zhong, Xueying
Gilthorpe, Jonathan D.
Landreh, Michael
Johansson, Jan
author_facet Leppert, Axel
Chen, Gefei
Lianoudaki, Danai
Williams, Chloe
Zhong, Xueying
Gilthorpe, Jonathan D.
Landreh, Michael
Johansson, Jan
author_sort Leppert, Axel
collection PubMed
description Molecular chaperones are essential to maintain proteostasis. While the functions of intracellular molecular chaperones that oversee protein synthesis, folding and aggregation, are established, those specialized to work in the extracellular environment are less understood. Extracellular proteins reside in a considerably more oxidizing milieu than cytoplasmic proteins and are stabilized by abundant disulfide bonds. Hence, extracellular proteins are potentially destabilized and sensitive to aggregation under reducing conditions. We combine biochemical and mass spectrometry experiments and elucidate that the molecular chaperone functions of the extracellular protein domain Bri2 BRICHOS only appear under reducing conditions, through the assembly of monomers into large polydisperse oligomers by an intra‐ to intermolecular disulfide bond relay mechanism. Chaperone‐active assemblies of the Bri2 BRICHOS domain are efficiently generated by physiological thiol‐containing compounds and proteins, and appear in parallel with reduction‐induced aggregation of extracellular proteins. Our results give insights into how potent chaperone activity can be generated from inactive precursors under conditions that are destabilizing to most extracellular proteins and thereby support protein stability/folding in the extracellular space. SIGNIFICANCE: Chaperones are essential to cells as they counteract toxic consequences of protein misfolding particularly under stress conditions. Our work describes a novel activation mechanism of an extracellular molecular chaperone domain, called Bri2 BRICHOS. This mechanism is based on reducing conditions that initiate small subunits to assemble into large oligomers via a disulfide relay mechanism. Activated Bri2 BRICHOS inhibits reduction‐induced aggregation of extracellular proteins and could be a means to boost proteostasis in the extracellular environment upon reductive stress.
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spelling pubmed-92780912022-07-15 ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions Leppert, Axel Chen, Gefei Lianoudaki, Danai Williams, Chloe Zhong, Xueying Gilthorpe, Jonathan D. Landreh, Michael Johansson, Jan Protein Sci Full‐length Papers Molecular chaperones are essential to maintain proteostasis. While the functions of intracellular molecular chaperones that oversee protein synthesis, folding and aggregation, are established, those specialized to work in the extracellular environment are less understood. Extracellular proteins reside in a considerably more oxidizing milieu than cytoplasmic proteins and are stabilized by abundant disulfide bonds. Hence, extracellular proteins are potentially destabilized and sensitive to aggregation under reducing conditions. We combine biochemical and mass spectrometry experiments and elucidate that the molecular chaperone functions of the extracellular protein domain Bri2 BRICHOS only appear under reducing conditions, through the assembly of monomers into large polydisperse oligomers by an intra‐ to intermolecular disulfide bond relay mechanism. Chaperone‐active assemblies of the Bri2 BRICHOS domain are efficiently generated by physiological thiol‐containing compounds and proteins, and appear in parallel with reduction‐induced aggregation of extracellular proteins. Our results give insights into how potent chaperone activity can be generated from inactive precursors under conditions that are destabilizing to most extracellular proteins and thereby support protein stability/folding in the extracellular space. SIGNIFICANCE: Chaperones are essential to cells as they counteract toxic consequences of protein misfolding particularly under stress conditions. Our work describes a novel activation mechanism of an extracellular molecular chaperone domain, called Bri2 BRICHOS. This mechanism is based on reducing conditions that initiate small subunits to assemble into large oligomers via a disulfide relay mechanism. Activated Bri2 BRICHOS inhibits reduction‐induced aggregation of extracellular proteins and could be a means to boost proteostasis in the extracellular environment upon reductive stress. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2022-07-13 2022-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9278091/ /pubmed/35900025 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4378 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Protein Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Protein Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Full‐length Papers
Leppert, Axel
Chen, Gefei
Lianoudaki, Danai
Williams, Chloe
Zhong, Xueying
Gilthorpe, Jonathan D.
Landreh, Michael
Johansson, Jan
ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
title ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
title_full ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
title_fullStr ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
title_full_unstemmed ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
title_short ATP‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
title_sort atp‐independent molecular chaperone activity generated under reducing conditions
topic Full‐length Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9278091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35900025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4378
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