Abstract

Heat shock proteins 70 (Hsp70) are chaperones consisting of a nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) and a substrate-binding domain (SBD), the latter of which binds protein clients. After ATP binds to the NBD, the SBD α/β subdomains’ shared interface opens, and the open SBD docks to the NBD. Such allosteric effects are stabilized by the newly formed NBD-SBD interdomain contacts. In this paper, we examined how such an opening and formation of subdomain interfaces is affected during the evolution of Hsp70. In particular, insertion and deletion events (indels) can be highly disruptive for the mechanical events since such changes introduce a collective shift in the pairing interactions at communicating interfaces. Based on a multiple sequence alignment analysis of data collected from Swiss-Prot/UniProt database, we find several indel-free regions (IFR) in Hsp70. The two largest IFRs are located in interdomain regions that participate in allosteric structural changes. We speculate that the reason why the indels have a lower likelihood of occurrence in these regions is that indel events in these regions cause dysfunction in the protein due to perturbations of the mechanical balance. Thus, the development of functional allosteric machines requires including in the rational design a concept of the balance between structural elements.

Highlights

  • In bacteria, heat-shock protein 70 (Hsp70, DnaK) is the essential, cell-survival response to a heat shock [1]

  • Heat shock proteins 70 (Hsp70) are chaperones consisting of a nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) and a substrate-binding domain (SBD), the latter of which binds protein clients

  • Based on a multiple sequence alignment analysis of data collected from Swiss-Prot/UniProt database, we find several indel-free regions (IFR) in Hsp70

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Summary

Introduction

Heat-shock protein 70 (Hsp, DnaK) is the essential, cell-survival response to a heat shock [1]. Having characterized differences in Hsp structures, we asked whether the extension of the structural changes is reflected in the phylogenesis of Hsp70 To this end, we calculated Kimura evolutionary distance from the Hsp70/DnaK protein sequences dataset, which we obtained from Swiss-Prot/UniProt (Figure 1d,e). We performed the second MSA of subdomains and calculated their pairwise evolutionary distances (Figure 1e) The average values obtained from distribution plots for these distances are 36.93 for βSBD, 42.36 for lobe I, 57.47 for lobe II and 119.69 for αSBD. To test whether differences in the distributions are systematic or due to a few exceptional outliers of Hsp, we constructed plots that correlate pairwise evolutionary distances between different DnaK subdomains. The observed difference between NBD and SBD in the initial plot originates primarily from the variability in the evolutionary distances of lobe II and αSBD

Indel Distribution from Multiple Sequence Alignment of Hsp70s
Phylogenesis of Hsp70 in Firmicutes and Proteobacteria
Clustering of Interdomain Residues Using Principal Component Analysis and Kernel Density Estimation
Non-Random Distributions of Indel-Free Regions in Bacterial Hsp70s
Interdomain Contacts Tend to Be Located within Indel-Free Regions
Hsp70 Subfamily Member HscC Contains Indels in IFR-I/III
Materials and Methods
Findings
Conclusions
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