Abstract

Small heat-shock proteins (sHSPs) are ubiquitously expressed molecular chaperones that inhibit amyloid fibril formation; however, their mechanisms of action remain poorly understood. sHSPs comprise a conserved α-crystallin domain flanked by variable N- and C-terminal regions. To investigate the functional contributions of these three regions, we compared the chaperone activities of various constructs of human αB-crystallin (HSPB5) and heat-shock 27-kDa protein (Hsp27, HSPB1) during amyloid formation by α-synuclein and apolipoprotein C-II. Using an array of approaches, including thioflavin T fluorescence assays and sedimentation analysis, we found that the N-terminal region of Hsp27 and the terminal regions of αB-crystallin are important for delaying amyloid fibril nucleation and for disaggregating mature apolipoprotein C-II fibrils. We further show that the terminal regions are required for stable fibril binding by both sHSPs and for mediating lateral fibril-fibril association, which sequesters preformed fibrils into large aggregates and is believed to have a cytoprotective function. We conclude that although the isolated α-crystallin domain retains some chaperone activity against amyloid formation, the flanking domains contribute additional and important chaperone activities, both in delaying amyloid formation and in mediating interactions of sHSPs with amyloid aggregates. Both these chaperone activities have significant implications for the pathogenesis and progression of diseases associated with amyloid deposition, such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases.

Highlights

  • Small heat-shock proteins are a major family of heat-shock proteins, present in all kingdoms of life, that have a low monomeric molecular mass, ranging from 15 to 40 kDa. sHSPs generally comprise a central, ;90-residue a-crystallin domain (ACD) and variable-length N- and C-terminal regions (NTRs and CTRs, respectively)

  • These findings demonstrate that the N-terminal region (NTR) of Hsp27 and the terminal regions of aB-C are important for delaying amyloid fibril formation by a-syn in vitro during both the nucleation phase and the elongation phase

  • We found that the NTR of Hsp27 and the terminal regions of aB-C are important for delaying the early stages of amyloid formation, for allowing sHSPs to associate with amyloid fibrils, and for inducing apoCII amyloid fibril disaggregation

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Summary

Introduction

Small heat-shock proteins (sHSPs) are a major family of heat-shock proteins, present in all kingdoms of life, that have a low monomeric molecular mass, ranging from 15 to 40 kDa. sHSPs generally comprise a central, ;90-residue a-crystallin domain (ACD) and variable-length N- and C-terminal regions (NTRs and CTRs, respectively). Despite their small monomeric size, metazoan sHSPs are structurally diverse, often existing as a heterogenous array of oligomeric states. SHSPs colocalize with deposits of aggregated proteins associated with a variety of protein misfolding diseases [39, 40], demonstrating their role in the cellular response to amyloid formation

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