Abstract

Deciphering functional mechanisms of the Hsp90 chaperone machinery is an important objective in cancer biology aiming to facilitate discovery of targeted anti-cancer therapies. Despite significant advances in understanding structure and function of molecular chaperones, organizing molecular principles that control the relationship between conformational diversity and functional mechanisms of the Hsp90 activity lack a sufficient quantitative characterization. We combined molecular dynamics simulations, principal component analysis, the energy landscape model and structure-functional analysis of Hsp90 regulatory interactions to systematically investigate functional dynamics of the molecular chaperone. This approach has identified a network of conserved regions common to the Hsp90 chaperones that could play a universal role in coordinating functional dynamics, principal collective motions and allosteric signaling of Hsp90. We have found that these functional motifs may be utilized by the molecular chaperone machinery to act collectively as central regulators of Hsp90 dynamics and activity, including the inter-domain communications, control of ATP hydrolysis, and protein client binding. These findings have provided support to a long-standing assertion that allosteric regulation and catalysis may have emerged via common evolutionary routes. The interaction networks regulating functional motions of Hsp90 may be determined by the inherent structural architecture of the molecular chaperone. At the same time, the thermodynamics-based “conformational selection” of functional states is likely to be activated based on the nature of the binding partner. This mechanistic model of Hsp90 dynamics and function is consistent with the notion that allosteric networks orchestrating cooperative protein motions can be formed by evolutionary conserved and sparsely connected residue clusters. Hence, allosteric signaling through a small network of distantly connected residue clusters may be a rather general functional requirement encoded across molecular chaperones. The obtained insights may be useful in guiding discovery of allosteric Hsp90 inhibitors targeting protein interfaces with co-chaperones and protein binding clients.

Highlights

  • The molecular chaperone Hsp90 (90 kDa heat-shock protein) is required for managing conformational development, stability and function of proteins in the cellular environment [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • We integrated allatom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with modeling of principal correlated motions, the energy landscape analysis and structure-functional characterization of regulatory interactions to investigate functional dynamics and mechanisms of the Hsp90 molecular chaperones

  • The following specific objectives were pursued in this study: (a) to quantify molecular mechanisms by which functional dynamics and allosteric motions of Hsp90 may be connected with the probabilistic nature of the underlying energy landscape; (b) to identify and characterize functional hotspots shared by the Hsp90 chaperones that could coordinate functional dynamics and ‘‘conformational selection’’ of the functional states

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Summary

Introduction

The molecular chaperone Hsp (90 kDa heat-shock protein) is required for managing conformational development, stability and function of proteins in the cellular environment [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Hsp has emerged as one of the most promising biological targets identified for the treatment of cancer since this molecular chaperone is responsible for folding of the proteins directly associated with all six hallmarks of cancer [20]. Inhibition of the Hsp protein folding machinery can often result in the disruption of numerous oncogenic pathways, while simultaneously achieving tumor cell specificity [21,22,23,24,25]. By disabling multiple signaling circuitries, Hsp inhibition provides a novel therapeutic strategy in cancer research, selective for specific cancer mechanisms, yet broadly applicable to disparate tumors with different genetic signatures [26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35]

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