Structural diversity in the small heat shock protein superfamily: Control of aggregation by the N-terminal region

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Abstract

The small heat shock protein superfamily, extending over all kingdoms, is characterized by a common core domain with variable N- and C-terminal extensions. The relatively hydrophobic N-terminus plays a critical role in promoting and controlling high-order aggregation, accounting for the high degree of structural variability within the superfamily. The effects of N-terminal volume on aggregation were studied using chimeric and truncated proteins. Proteins lacking the N-terminal region did not aggregate above the tetramers, whereas larger N-termini resulted in large aggregates, consistent with the N-termini packing inside the aggregates. Variation in an extended internal loop differentiates typical prokaryotic and plant superfamily members from their animal counterparts; this implies different geometry in the dimeric building block of highorder aggregates.

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Salernol, J. C., Eifert, C. L., Salerno, K. M., & Koretz, J. F. (2003). Structural diversity in the small heat shock protein superfamily: Control of aggregation by the N-terminal region. Protein Engineering, 16(11), 847–851. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzg102

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