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Article
Quaternary Dynamics and Plasticity Underlie Small Heat Shock Protein Chaperone Function
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2009)
  • Florian Stengel
  • Andrew J. Baldwin
  • Alexander J. Painter
  • Nomalie Jaya
  • Eman Basha
  • Lewis E. Kay
  • Elizabeth Vierling, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Carol V. Robinson
  • Justin L. P. Benesch
Abstract

Small Heat Shock Proteins (sHSPs) are a diverse family of molecular chaperones that prevent protein aggregation by binding clients destabilized during cellular stress. Here we probe the architecture and dynamics of complexes formed between an oligomeric sHSP and client by employing unique mass spectrometry strategies. We observe over 300 different stoichiometries of interaction, demonstrating that an ensemble of structures underlies the protection these chaperones confer to unfolding clients. This astonishing heterogeneity not only makes the system quite distinct in behavior to ATP-dependent chaperones, but also renders it intractable by conventional structural biology approaches. We find that thermally regulated quaternary dynamics of the sHSP establish and maintain the plasticity of the system. This extends the paradigm that intrinsic dynamics are crucial to protein function to include equilibrium fluctuations in quaternary structure, and suggests they are integral to the sHSPs’ role in the cellular protein homeostasis network.

Keywords
  • heterogeneity,
  • mass spectrometry,
  • polydispersity,
  • protein dynamics,
  • proteostasis
Publication Date
2009
Publisher Statement
doi: 10.1073/pnas.0910126107
Citation Information
Florian Stengel, Andrew J. Baldwin, Alexander J. Painter, Nomalie Jaya, et al.. "Quaternary Dynamics and Plasticity Underlie Small Heat Shock Protein Chaperone Function" Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2009)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/elizabeth_vierling/4/