Liberation of the intramolecular interaction as the mechanism of heat-induced activation of HSP90 molecular chaperone

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Abstract

The molecular chaperone function of HSP90 is activated under heat-stress conditions. In the present study, we investigated the role of the interactions in the heat-induced activation of HSP90 molecular chaperone. The preceding paper demonstrated two domain-domain interactions of HtpG, an Escherichia coli homologue of mammalian HSP90, i.e. an intra-molecular interaction between the N-terminal and middle domains and an intermolecular one between the middle and C-terminal domains. A bacterial two-hybrid system revealed that the two interactions also existed in human HSP90α. Partners of the interaction between the N-terminal and middle domains of human HSP90α could, but those between the middle and C-terminal domains could not, be replaced by the domains of HtpG. Thus, the interface between the N-terminal and middle domains is essentially unvaried from bacterial to human members of the HSP90-family proteins. The citrate synthase-binding activity of HtpG at an elevated temperature was solely localized in the N-terminal domain, but HSP90α possessed two sites in the N-terminal and other domains. The citrate-synthase-binding activity of the N-terminal domain was suppressed by the association of the middle domain. The complex between the N-terminal and middle domains is labile at elevated temperatures, but the other is stable even at 70°C. Taken together, we propose the liberation of the N-terminal client-binding domain from the middle suppressor domain is involved in the temperature-dependent activation mechanism of HSP90 molecular chaperone.

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Tanaka, E., Nemoto, T. K., & Ono, T. (2001). Liberation of the intramolecular interaction as the mechanism of heat-induced activation of HSP90 molecular chaperone. European Journal of Biochemistry, 268(20), 5270–5277. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0014-2956.2001.02458.x

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