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A fluorescent multi-domain protein reveals the unfolding mechanism of Hsp70

Biology

A fluorescent multi-domain protein reveals the unfolding mechanism of Hsp70

S. Tiwari, B. Fauvet, et al.

Explore the intriguing mechanism by which Hsp70 chaperones prevent protein aggregation, featuring the novel reporter chaperone substrate MLucV. This research conducted by Satyam Tiwari, Bruno Fauvet, Salvatore Assenza, Paolo De Los Rios, and Pierre Goloubinoff reveals how ATP-fueled actions lead to native MLucV accumulation, even under extreme denaturing conditions!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Detailed understanding of the mechanism by which Hsp70 chaperones protect cells against protein aggregation is hampered by the lack of a comprehensive characterization of the aggregates, which are typically heterogeneous. Here we designed a reporter chaperone substrate, MLucV, composed of a stress-labile luciferase flanked by stress-resistant fluorescent domains, which upon denaturation formed a discrete population of small aggregates. Combining Förster resonance energy transfer and enzymatic activity measurements provided unprecedented details on the aggregated, unfolded, Hsp70-bound and native MLucV conformations. The Hsp70 mechanism first involved ATP-fueled disaggregation and unfolding of the stable pre-aggregated substrate, which stretched MLucV beyond simply unfolded conformations, followed by native refolding. The ATP-fueled unfolding and refolding action of Hsp70 on MLucV aggregates could accumulate native MLucV species under elevated denaturing temperatures highly adverse to the native state. These results unambiguously exclude binding and preventing of aggregation from the non-equilibrium mechanism by which Hsp70 converts stable aggregates into metastable native proteins.
Publisher
Nature Chemical Biology
Published On
Oct 20, 2022
Authors
Satyam Tiwari, Bruno Fauvet, Salvatore Assenza, Paolo De Los Rios, Pierre Goloubinoff
Tags
Hsp70 chaperones
protein aggregation
MLucV
chaperone substrate
ATP-fueled mechanism
native accumulation
denaturing conditions
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