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Small heat-shock proteins interact with a flanking domain to suppress polyglutamine aggregation

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posted on 2024-11-14, 15:45 authored by Amy L Roberston, Stephen J Headey, Helen M Saunders, Heath EcroydHeath Ecroyd, Martin J Scanlon, John A Carver, Stephen P Bottomley
Small heat-shock proteins (sHsps) are molecular chaperones that play an important protective role against cellular protein misfolding by interacting with partially unfolded proteins on their off-folding pathway, preventing their aggregation. Polyglutamine (polyQ) repeat expansion leads to the formation of fibrillar protein aggregates and neuronal cell death in nine diseases, including Huntington disease and the spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs). There is evidence that sHsps have a role in suppression of polyQ-induced neurodegeneration; for example, the sHsp alphaB-crystallin (αB-c) has been identified as a suppressor of SCA3 toxicity in a Drosophila model. However, the molecular mechanism for this suppression is unknown. In this study we tested the ability of αB-c to suppress the aggregation of a polyQ protein. We found that αB-c does not inhibit the formation of SDS-insoluble polyQ fibrils. We further tested the effect of αB-c on the aggregation of ataxin-3, a polyQ protein that aggregates via a two-stage aggregation mechanism. The first stage involves association of the N-terminal Josephin domain followed by polyQ-mediated interactions and the formation of SDS-resistant mature fibrils. Our data show that αB-c potently inhibits the first stage of ataxin-3 aggregation; however, the second polyQ-dependent stage can still proceed. By using NMR spectroscopy, we have determined that αB-c interacts with an extensive region on the surface of the Josephin domain. These data provide an example of a domain/region flanking an amyloidogenic sequence that has a critical role in modulating aggregation of a polypeptide and plays a role in the interaction with molecular chaperones to prevent this aggregation.

History

Citation

Roberston, A. L., Headey, S. J., Saunders, H. M., Ecroyd, H., Scanlon, M. J., Carver, J. A. & Bottomley, S. P. (2010). Small heat-shock proteins interact with a flanking domain to suppress polyglutamine aggregation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of USA, 107 (23), 10424-10429.

Journal title

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume

107

Issue

23

Pagination

10424-10429

Language

English

RIS ID

32751

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