The human small heat-shock protein alpha B-crystallin (alpha B) rescues misfolded proteins from irreversible aggregation during cellular stress. Binding of Cu(II) was shown to modulate the oligomeric architecture and the chaperone activity of alpha B. However, the mechanistic basis of this stimulation is so far not understood. We provide here first structural insights into this Cu(II)-mediated modulation of chaperone function using NMR spectroscopy and other biophysical approaches. We show that the alpha-crystallin domain is the elementary Cu(II)-binding unit specifically coordinating one Cu(II) ion with picomolar binding affinity. Putative Cu(II) ligands are His(83), His(104), His(111), and Asp(109) at the dimer interface. These loop residues are conserved among different metazoans, but also for human alpha A-crystallin, HSP20, and HSP27. The involvement of Asp109 has direct implications for dimer stability, because this residue forms a salt bridge with the disease-related Arg(120) of the neighboring monomer. Furthermore, we observe structural reorganization of strands beta 2-beta 3 triggered by Cu(II) binding. This N-terminal region is known to mediate both the intermolecular arrangement in alpha B oligomers and the binding of client proteins. In the presence of Cu(II), the size and the heterogeneity of alpha B multimers are increased. Atthesametime, Cu(II) increases the chaperone activity of alpha B toward the lens-specific protein beta(L)-crystallin. We therefore suggest that Cu(II) binding unblocks potential client binding sites and alters quaternary dynamics of both the dimeric building block as well as the higher order assemblies of alpha B.
Structural and Mechanistic Implications of Metal Binding in the Small Heat-shock Protein B-crystallin / A. Mainz;B. Bardiaux;F. Kuppler;G. Multhaup;I. C. Felli;R. Pierattelli;B. Reif. - In: THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0021-9258. - STAMPA. - 287:(2012), pp. 1128-1138. [10.1074/jbc.M111.309047]
Structural and Mechanistic Implications of Metal Binding in the Small Heat-shock Protein B-crystallin
FELLI, ISABELLA CATERINA;PIERATTELLI, ROBERTA;
2012
Abstract
The human small heat-shock protein alpha B-crystallin (alpha B) rescues misfolded proteins from irreversible aggregation during cellular stress. Binding of Cu(II) was shown to modulate the oligomeric architecture and the chaperone activity of alpha B. However, the mechanistic basis of this stimulation is so far not understood. We provide here first structural insights into this Cu(II)-mediated modulation of chaperone function using NMR spectroscopy and other biophysical approaches. We show that the alpha-crystallin domain is the elementary Cu(II)-binding unit specifically coordinating one Cu(II) ion with picomolar binding affinity. Putative Cu(II) ligands are His(83), His(104), His(111), and Asp(109) at the dimer interface. These loop residues are conserved among different metazoans, but also for human alpha A-crystallin, HSP20, and HSP27. The involvement of Asp109 has direct implications for dimer stability, because this residue forms a salt bridge with the disease-related Arg(120) of the neighboring monomer. Furthermore, we observe structural reorganization of strands beta 2-beta 3 triggered by Cu(II) binding. This N-terminal region is known to mediate both the intermolecular arrangement in alpha B oligomers and the binding of client proteins. In the presence of Cu(II), the size and the heterogeneity of alpha B multimers are increased. Atthesametime, Cu(II) increases the chaperone activity of alpha B toward the lens-specific protein beta(L)-crystallin. We therefore suggest that Cu(II) binding unblocks potential client binding sites and alters quaternary dynamics of both the dimeric building block as well as the higher order assemblies of alpha B.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.