Abstract

Hsp104 is a hexameric AAA+ ring translocase, which drives protein disaggregation in nonmetazoan eukaryotes. Cryo-EM structures of Hsp104 have suggested potential mechanisms of substrate translocation, but precisely how Hsp104 hexamers disaggregate proteins remains incompletely understood. Here, we employed synchrotron X-ray footprinting to probe the solution-state structures of Hsp104 monomers in the absence of nucleotide and Hsp104 hexamers in the presence of ADP or ATPγS (adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate)). Comparing side-chain solvent accessibilities between these three states illuminated aspects of Hsp104 structure and guided design of Hsp104 variants to probe the disaggregase mechanism in vitro and in vivo We established that Hsp104 hexamers switch from a more-solvated state in ADP to a less-solvated state in ATPγS, consistent with switching from an open spiral to a closed ring visualized by cryo-EM. We pinpointed critical N-terminal domain (NTD), NTD-nucleotide-binding domain 1 (NBD1) linker, NBD1, and middle domain (MD) residues that enable intrinsic disaggregase activity and Hsp70 collaboration. We uncovered NTD residues in the loop between helices A1 and A2 that can be substituted to enhance disaggregase activity. We elucidated a novel potentiated Hsp104 MD variant, Hsp104-RYD, which suppresses α-synuclein, fused in sarcoma (FUS), and TDP-43 toxicity. We disambiguated a secondary pore-loop in NBD1, which collaborates with the NTD and NBD1 tyrosine-bearing pore-loop to drive protein disaggregation. Finally, we defined Leu-601 in NBD2 as crucial for Hsp104 hexamerization. Collectively, our findings unveil new facets of Hsp104 structure and mechanism. They also connect regions undergoing large changes in solvation to functionality, which could have profound implications for protein engineering.

Highlights

  • Hsp104 is a hexameric AAA؉ ring translocase, which drives protein disaggregation in nonmetazoan eukaryotes

  • Each Hsp104 monomer is composed of an N-terminal domain (NTD),4 two AAAϩ nucleotide-binding domains (NBD1 and NBD2) that bind and hydrolyze ATP, a coiled-coil middle domain (MD) inserted in nucleotide– binding domain 1 (NBD1), and a short C-terminal region [15]

  • Samples of the Hsp104 monomer and the Hsp104 hexamer in the presence of either ADP or ATP␥S were exposed to millisecond bursts of synchrotron X-rays and analyzed using MS as described under “Experimental procedures.”

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Summary

Edited by Wolfgang Peti

Hsp104 is a hexameric AAA؉ ring translocase, which drives protein disaggregation in nonmetazoan eukaryotes. Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) has revealed that Hsp104 hexamers populate an open “lock-washer” spiral state in the presence of ADP, but switch to closed ring structures that surround polypeptide substrate inside the channel in the presence of ATP␥S [16, 17] These conformational changes are proposed to drive polypeptide translocation across the central channel, which enables the remodeling of diverse substrates, from thermally-denatured aggregates (20 –22) to amyloid conformers [20, 23,24,25,26,27]. To fully understand and validate the details of these conformational changes, and to understand the mechanisms that underpin substrate remodeling, Hsp104 structure and dynamics need to be probed using diverse and complementary methodologies (28 –30) Filtered peptides represent the peptides remaining after removal of those that had poor signal to noise

Final Filtered peptide Percent Peptides Modified modified count coverage
Peptide overview
Start End
Discussion
Protein expression and purification
Luciferase reactivation
In vivo thermotolerance assay
Immunoblotting and quantification
Fluorescence polarization
Mass spectrometry on the XF samples
Identification of oxidatively modified peptides
Analysis of modification rate of peptides using Matlab
Full Text
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