Obuchowski I, Piróg A, Stolarska M, Tomiczek B, Liberek K. Duplicate divergence of two bacterial small heat shock proteins reduces the demand for Hsp70 in refolding of substrates.
PLoS Genet 2019;
15:e1008479. [PMID:
31652260 PMCID:
PMC6834283 DOI:
10.1371/journal.pgen.1008479]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/21/2018] [Revised: 11/06/2019] [Accepted: 10/15/2019] [Indexed: 12/22/2022] Open
Abstract
Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) are a conserved class of ATP-independent chaperones that bind to aggregation-prone polypeptides at stress conditions. sHsps encage these polypeptides in assemblies, shielding them from further aggregation. To facilitate their subsequent solubilization and refolding by Hsp70 (DnaK) and Hsp100 (ClpB) chaperones, first, sHsps need to dissociate from the assemblies. In most γ-proteobacteria, these functions are fulfilled by a single sHsp (IbpA), but in a subset of Enterobacterales, a two-protein sHsp (IbpA and IbpB) system has evolved. To gain insight into the emergence of complexity within this chaperone system, we reconstructed the phylogeny of γ-proteobacteria and their sHsps. We selected proteins representative of systems comprising either one or two sHsps and analysed their ability to form sHsps-substrate assemblies. All the tested IbpA proteins, but not IbpBs, stably interact with an aggregating substrate. Moreover, in Escherichia coli cells, ibpA but not ibpB suppress the growth defect associated with low DnaK level, which points to the major protective role of IbpA during the breakdown of protein quality control. We also examined how sHsps affect the association of Hsp70 with the assemblies at the initial phase of disaggregation and how they affect protein recovery after stress. Our results suggest that a single gene duplication event has given rise to the sHsp system consisting of a strong canonical binder, IbpA, and its non-canonical paralog IbpB that enhances sHsps dissociation from the assemblies. The cooperation between the sHsps reduces the demand for Hsp70 needed to outcompete them from the assemblies by promoting sHsps dissociation without compromising assembly formation at heat shock. This potentially increases the robustness and elasticity of sHsps protection against irreversible aggregation.
Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) are a class of molecular chaperones playing an important role in maintaining cell proteostasis. Their most widespread and evolutionarily conserved function is binding to denaturing polypeptides. Small Hsps shield their substrates from further aggregation until conditions are favourable for their refolding by chaperones from the Hsp70 and Hsp100 families. To exert this function, at stress conditions, oligomeric sHsps dissociate into dimers and scavenge partially unfolded substrates, forming assemblies containing both substrate proteins and sHsps. Substrate proteins in such assemblies are refolding-competent. Later, when a cell recovers from stress, sHsps need to dissociate from the assemblies to make the substrates available for the disaggregating and refolding chaperones. Most bacteria possess one sHsp-encoding gene. However, their single sHsp is burdened with a trade-off: on one hand, it has to rapidly associate with the misfolding proteins, on the other, it needs to dissociate from them to allow effective disaggregation. With phylogenetic and biochemical approaches, we analysed a two-sHsp system distinctive of the Enterobacterales order, unravelling a potential evolutionary advantage granted by functional cooperation between the two sHsps. Our results indicate that after a gene duplication event, one sHsp specialized in tight substrate binding, whereas another sHsp became important for efficient dissociation of both sHsps to enable recovery of proteins trapped in the assemblies.
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