The α-crystallin Chaperones Undergo a Quasi-ordered Co-aggregation Process in Response to Saturating Client Interaction
[Display omitted] •α-crystallins (αAc and αBc) are archetypal sHSPs vital for proteostasis.•αAc and αBc display client-induced expansion and elongation of sHSP scaffold.•Client-saturation results in light-scattering amorphous sHSP co-aggregates.•Co-aggregates maintain internal features of highly elo...
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Published in | Journal of molecular biology Vol. 436; no. 8; p. 168499 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Netherlands
Elsevier Ltd
15.04.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | [Display omitted]
•α-crystallins (αAc and αBc) are archetypal sHSPs vital for proteostasis.•αAc and αBc display client-induced expansion and elongation of sHSP scaffold.•Client-saturation results in light-scattering amorphous sHSP co-aggregates.•Co-aggregates maintain internal features of highly elongated sHSP scaffolding.•The quasi-ordered trajectory reshapes our understanding of sHSP aggregation.
Small heat shock proteins (sHSPs) are ATP-independent chaperones vital to cellular proteostasis, preventing protein aggregation events linked to various human diseases including cataract. The α-crystallins, αA-crystallin (αAc) and αB-crystallin (αBc), represent archetypal sHSPs that exhibit complex polydispersed oligomeric assemblies and rapid subunit exchange dynamics. Yet, our understanding of how this plasticity contributes to chaperone function remains poorly understood. Using biochemical and biophysical analyses combined with single-particle electron microscopy (EM), we examined structural changes in αAc, αBc and native heteromeric lens α-crystallins (αLc) in their apo-states and at varying degree of chaperone saturation leading to co-aggregation, using lysozyme and insulin as model clients. Quantitative single-particle analysis unveiled a continuous spectrum of oligomeric states formed during the co-aggregation process, marked by significant client-triggered expansion and quasi-ordered elongation of the sHSP oligomeric scaffold, whereby the native cage-like sHSP assembly displays a directional growth to accommodate saturating conditions of client sequestration. These structural modifications culminated in an apparent amorphous collapse of chaperone-client complexes, resulting in the creation of co-aggregates capable of scattering visible light. Intriguingly, these co-aggregates maintain internal morphological features of highly elongated sHSP oligomers with striking resemblance to polymeric α-crystallin species isolated from aged lens tissue. This mechanism appears consistent across αAc, αBc and αLc, albeit with varying degrees of susceptibility to client-induced co-aggregation. Importantly, our findings suggest that client-induced co-aggregation follows a distinctive mechanistic and quasi-ordered trajectory, distinct from a purely amorphous process. These insights reshape our understanding of the physiological and pathophysiological co-aggregation processes of α-crystallins, carrying potential implications for a pathway toward cataract formation. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0022-2836 1089-8638 1089-8638 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jmb.2024.168499 |