Abstract

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae heat shock protein Hsp31 is a stress-inducible homodimeric protein that is involved in diauxic shift reprogramming and has glyoxalase activity. We show that substoichiometric concentrations of Hsp31 can abrogate aggregation of a broad array of substrates in vitro. Hsp31 also modulates the aggregation of α-synuclein (αSyn), a target of the chaperone activity of human DJ-1, an Hsp31 homolog. We demonstrate that Hsp31 is able to suppress the in vitro fibrillization or aggregation of αSyn, citrate synthase and insulin. Chaperone activity was also observed in vivo because constitutive overexpression of Hsp31 reduced the incidence of αSyn cytoplasmic foci, and yeast cells were rescued from αSyn-generated proteotoxicity upon Hsp31 overexpression. Moreover, we showed that Hsp31 protein levels are increased by H2O2, in the diauxic phase of normal growth conditions, and in cells under αSyn-mediated proteotoxic stress. We show that Hsp31 chaperone activity and not the methylglyoxalase activity or the autophagy pathway drives the protective effects. We also demonstrate reduced aggregation of the Sup35 prion domain, PrD-Sup35, as visualized by fluorescent protein fusions. In addition, Hsp31 acts on its substrates prior to the formation of large aggregates because Hsp31 does not mutually localize with prion aggregates, and it prevents the formation of detectable in vitro αSyn fibrils. These studies establish that the protective role of Hsp31 against cellular stress is achieved by chaperone activity that intervenes early in the protein misfolding process and is effective on a wide spectrum of substrate proteins, including αSyn and prion proteins.

Highlights

  • Hsp31 is a multifunctional cellular stress response protein

  • The tag was removed by 3C protease, and only 3 amino acids (GPL) were retained on the recombinant Hsp31 protein, which was confirmed by mass spectrometry

  • Because of the multiple activities associated with this superfamily, we sought to characterize the chaperone activity of Hsp31 and delineate its contribution in protecting against cellular stress

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Summary

Background

Hsp is a multifunctional cellular stress response protein. Results: Hsp is a stress-inducible chaperone that has substoichiometric activity on a wide spectrum of substrates, including prions and the non-physiological client, ␣-synuclein. Hsp acts on its substrates prior to the formation of large aggregates because Hsp does not mutually localize with prion aggregates, and it prevents the formation of detectable in vitro ␣Syn fibrils These studies establish that the protective role of Hsp against cellular stress is achieved by chaperone activity that intervenes early in the protein misfolding process and is effective on a wide spectrum of substrate proteins, including ␣Syn and prion proteins. E. coli hchA is a close ortholog with yeast Hsp, and they share superimposable active sites in each monomer, but their quaternary structures appear to be different [17, 19] This protein family is of biomedical importance due to the role these proteins play in chaperone-like and. We demonstrate that Hsp has methylglyoxalase activity that converts methylglyoxal (MGO) substrate to D-lactate, but this enzyme activity is not essential for protecting against ␣Synmediated cytotoxicity

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