Abstract

The Hsp90 molecular chaperones are ATP-dependent enzymes that maintain protein homeostasis and regulate many essential cellular processes. Higher eukaryotes have organelle-specific Hsp90 paralogs that are adapted to each subcellular environment. The mitochondrial Hsp90, TNF receptor–associated protein 1 (TRAP1), supports the folding and activity of electron transport components and is increasingly appreciated as a critical player in mitochondrial signaling. Calcium plays a well-known and important regulatory role in mitochondria where it can accumulate to much higher concentrations than in the cytoplasm. Surprisingly, we found here that calcium can replace magnesium, the essential enzymatic cofactor, to support TRAP1 ATPase activity. Anomalous X-ray diffraction experiments revealed a calcium-binding site within the TRAP1 nucleotide-binding pocket located near the ATP α-phosphate and completely distinct from the magnesium-binding site adjacent to the β- and γ-phosphates. In the presence of magnesium, ATP hydrolysis by TRAP1, as with other Hsp90s, was noncooperative, whereas calcium binding resulted in cooperative hydrolysis by the two protomers within the Hsp90 dimer. The structural data suggested a mechanism for this cooperative behavior. Because of the cooperativity, at high ATP concentrations, ATPase activity was higher with calcium, whereas the converse was observed at low ATP concentrations. Integrating these observations, we propose a model in which the divalent cation choice can control switching between noncooperative and cooperative TRAP1 ATPase mechanisms in response to varying ATP concentrations. This switching may facilitate coordination between cellular energetics, mitochondrial signaling, and protein homeostasis via alterations in the TRAP1 ATP-driven cycle and its consequent effects on different mitochondrial clients.

Highlights

  • The Hsp90 molecular chaperones are ATP-dependent enzymes that maintain protein homeostasis and regulate many essential cellular processes

  • We look at how a mitochondrial homolog of the molecular chaperone Hsp90 (TRAP1)2 may be regulated by calcium binding via a novel mechanism

  • We found that unlike most other Hsp90 homologs, the TNF receptor– associated protein 1 (TRAP1) ATPase can efficiently utilize calcium alone to support hydrolysis, and that the relative preference for magnesium or calcium depends upon the concentration of free ATP

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Summary

Introduction

The Hsp molecular chaperones are ATP-dependent enzymes that maintain protein homeostasis and regulate many essential cellular processes. Integrating these observations, we propose a model in which the divalent cation choice can control switching between noncooperative and cooperative TRAP1 ATPase mechanisms in response to varying ATP concentrations This switching may facilitate coordination between cellular energetics, mitochondrial signaling, and protein homeostasis via alterations in the TRAP1 ATP-driven cycle and its consequent effects on different mitochondrial clients. Hsp90s are well conserved from bacteria to mammals, distinct orthologs can be found within organelles: Grp in the endoplasmic reticulum, TRAP1 in mitochondria, and Hsp90.5 in chloroplasts Beyond their role in supporting individual “client” substrate proteins, cytosolic Hsp90s are critically important for maintaining protein homeostasis and modulating certain pro-apoptotic kinases

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