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Phosphomimics destabilize Hsp27 oligomeric assemblies and enhance chaperone activity

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posted on 2024-11-16, 06:55 authored by Blagojce Jovcevski, Megan KellyMegan Kelly, Anthea RoteAnthea Rote, Tracey BergTracey Berg, Heidi Y Gastall, Justin Benesch, Andrew Aquilina, Heath EcroydHeath Ecroyd
Serine phosphorylation of the mammalian small heat-shock protein Hsp27 at residues 15, 78, and 82 is thought to regulate its structure and chaperone function; however, the site-specific impact has not been established. We used mass spectrometry to assess the combinatorial effect of mutations that mimic phosphorylation upon the oligomeric state of Hsp27. Comprehensive dimerization yielded a relatively uncrowded spectrum, composed solely of even-sized oligomers. Modification at one or two serines decreased the average oligomeric size, while the triple mutant was predominantly a dimer. These changes were reflected in a greater propensity for oligomers to dissociate upon increased modification. The ability of Hsp27 to prevent amorphous or fibrillar aggregation of target proteins was enhanced and correlated with the amount of dissociated species present. We propose that, in vivo, phosphorylation promotes oligomer dissociation, thereby enhancing chaperone activity. Our data support a model in which dimers are the chaperone-active component of Hsp27.

Funding

Small heat shock proteins: front-line defenders and therapeutic targets

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Jovcevski, B., Kelly, M. A., Rote, A. P., Berg, T., Gastall, H. Y., Benesch, J. L. P., Aquilina, J. Andrew. & Ecroyd, H. (2015). Phosphomimics destabilize Hsp27 oligomeric assemblies and enhance chaperone activity. Chemistry and Biology, 22 (2), 186-195.

Journal title

Chemistry and Biology

Volume

22

Issue

2

Pagination

186-195

Language

English

RIS ID

98660

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