Direct interactions between molecular chaperones heat-shock protein (Hsp) 70 and Hsp40: yeast Hsp70 Ssa1 binds the extreme C-terminal region of yeast Hsp40 Sis1
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 361 (1) , 27-34
- https://doi.org/10.1042/0264-6021:3610027
Abstract
Heat-shock protein 40 (Hsp40) enables Hsp70 to play critical roles in a number of cellular processes, such as protein folding, assembly, degradation and translocation in vivo. Hsp40 recognizes and binds non-native polypeptides and delivers them to Hsp70. Then Hsp40 stimulates the ATPase activity of Hsp70 to fold the polypeptides. By using yeast Hsp40 Sis1 and yeast Hsp70 Ssa1 as our model proteins, we found that the Sis1 peptide-binding fragment interacts directly with the full-length Ssa1 in vitro. Further studies showed that the C-terminal lid domain of Ssa1 could interact with Sis1 peptide-binding domain physically in vitro. The Sis1 peptide-binding fragment forms a stable complex with the Ssa1 C-terminal lid domain in solution. The interactions between these two proteins appear to be charge-charge interactions because high-ionic-strength buffer can dissociate the complex. Further mapping studies showed that the Sis1 peptide-binding fragment binds the extreme C-terminal 15 amino acid residues of Ssa1. A flexible glycine-rich region is followed by these 15 residues in the Ssa1 primary sequence. Atomic force microscopy of the Sis1-Ssa1 complex showed that only one end of the Ssa1 lid domain binds the Sis1 peptide-binding-fragment dimer at the upper level of the huge groove within the Sis1 dimer. Based on the data, we propose an "anchoring and docking" model to illustrate the mechanisms by which Hsp40 interacts with Hsp70 and delivers the non-native polypeptide to Hsp70.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Molecular chaperones in cellular protein foldingNature, 1996
- Direct Observation of Enzyme Activity with the Atomic Force MicroscopeScience, 1994
- The yeast SIS1 protein, a DnaJ homolog, is required for the initiation of translationCell, 1993
- The emergence of the chaperone machinesTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1992
- Successive action of DnaK, DnaJ and GroEL along the pathway of chaperone-mediated protein foldingNature, 1992
- Protein folding in the cellNature, 1992
- Peptide-binding specificity of the molecular chaperone BiPNature, 1991
- Characterization of SIS1, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologue of bacterial dnaJ proteins.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Three-dimensional structure of the ATPase fragment of a 70K heat-shock cognate proteinNature, 1990
- Polypeptide chain binding proteins: Catalysts of protein folding and related processes in cellsCell, 1989