Abstract

Molecular chaperones such as Hsp70 use ATP binding and hydrolysis to prevent aggregation and ensure the efficient folding of newly translated and stress-denatured polypeptides. Eukaryotic cells contain several cytosolic Hsp70 subfamilies. In yeast, these include the Hsp70s SSB and SSA as well as the Hsp110-like Sse1/2p. The cellular functions and interplay between these different Hsp70 systems remain ill-defined. Here we show that the different cytosolic Hsp70 systems functionally interact with Hsp110 to form a chaperone network that interacts with newly translated polypeptides during their biogenesis. Both SSB and SSA Hsp70s form stable complexes with the Hsp110 Sse1p. Pulse-chase analysis indicates that these Hsp70/Hsp110 teams, SSB/SSE and SSA/SSE, transiently associate with newly synthesized polypeptides with different kinetics. SSB Hsp70s bind cotranslationally to a large fraction of nascent chains, suggesting an early role in the stabilization of nascent chains. SSA Hsp70s bind mostly post-translationally to a more restricted subset of newly translated polypeptides, suggesting a downstream function in the folding pathway. Notably, loss of SSB dramatically enhances the cotranslational association of SSA with nascent chains, suggesting SSA can partially fulfill an SSB-like function. On the other hand, the absence of SSE1 enhances polypeptide binding to both SSB and SSA and impairs cell growth. It, thus, appears that Hsp110 is an important regulator of Hsp70-substrate interactions. Based on our data, we propose that Hsp110 cooperates with the SSB and SSA Hsp70 subfamilies, which act sequentially during de novo folding.

Highlights

  • Binding and an 18-kDa C-terminal domain that binds the substrate polypeptide

  • The Hsp70-like Sse1p Associates with the Cytosolic Hsp70s SSB and SSA—To better understand the function of Hsp70s in de novo folding, we analyzed the interactions of the ribosome-bound Hsp70 SSB

  • Because in vitro experiments suggested that another cytosolic Hsp70, Ssz1p, is required for nascent chain binding to SSB [21], we examined SSB nascent chain binding in a ⌬ssz1 strain

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Summary

Introduction

Binding and an 18-kDa C-terminal domain that binds the substrate polypeptide (for reviews, see Refs. 2, 6, and 7). Many completed 35S-labeled proteins were already released into the soluble fraction (Fig. 4B, lane 1), only newly made SSB, Sse1p, and an additional polypeptide were observed in the SSB immunoprecipitation of the supernatant of the centrifugation (Fig. 4B, lane 7), suggesting that SSB associates preferentially with ribosomebound nascent chains but less effectively with released full-length polypeptides. In wild type cells immunoprecipitation of SSA in the ribosomal fractions revealed an interaction with nascent chains (Fig. 4D, lane 9), albeit at a much lower level than observed for SSB.

Results
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