ID 9059
File
Authors
Miyawaki, Shiori Graduate School of Sustainability Science, Tottori University
Uemura, Yumi Department of Engineering, Tottori University
Hongo, Kunihiro Graduate School of Sustainability Science, Tottori University / Department of Engineering, Tottori University / Center for Research on Green Sustainable Chemistry, Tottori University Researchers DB KAKEN
Kawata, Yasushi Graduate School of Sustainability Science, Tottori University / Department of Engineering, Tottori University / Center for Research on Green Sustainable Chemistry, Tottori University Researchers DB KAKEN
Mizobata, Tomohiro Graduate School of Sustainability Science, Tottori University / Department of Engineering, Tottori University / Center for Research on Green Sustainable Chemistry, Tottori University Researchers DB KAKEN
Keywords
molecular chaperone
protein folding
Gram-negative bacteria
protein aggregation
small heat shock protein (sHsp)
amyloid
acid denaturation
periplasm
protein fibrillogenesis
reversible fibrillation
Abstract
The periplasmic small heat shock protein HdeA from Escherichia coli is inactive under normal growth conditions (at pH 7) and activated only when E. coli cells are subjected to a sudden decrease in pH, converting HdeA into an acid-denatured active state. Here, using in vitro fibrillation assays, transmission EM, atomic-force microscopy, and CD analyses, we found that when HdeA is active as a molecular chaperone, it is also capable of forming inactive aggregates that, at first glance, resemble amyloid fibrils. We noted that the molecular chaperone activity of HdeA takes precedence over fibrillogenesis under acidic conditions, as the presence of denatured substrate protein was sufficient to suppress HdeA fibril formation. Further experiments suggested that the secondary structure of HdeA fibrils deviates somewhat from typical amyloid fibrils and contains α-helices. Strikingly, HdeA fibrils that formed at pH 2 were immediately resolubilized by a simple shift to pH 7 and from there could regain molecular chaperone activity upon a return to pH 1. HdeA, therefore, provides an unusual example of a “reversible” form of protein fibrillation with an atypical secondary structure composition. The competition between active assistance of denatured polypeptides (its “molecular chaperone” activity) and the formation of inactive fibrillary deposits (its “fibrillogenic” activity) provides a unique opportunity to probe the relationship among protein function, structure, and aggregation in detail.
Publisher
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Content Type
Journal Article
Link
ISSN
00219258
EISSN
1083351X
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume
294
Issue
5
Start Page
1590
End Page
1601
Published Date
2019-02-01
Publisher-DOI
Text Version
Publisher
Rights
© 2019 Miyawaki et al. Published under exclusive license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Citation
Miyawaki Shiori, Uemura Yumi, Hongo Kunihiro, et al. Acid-denatured small heat shock protein HdeA from Escherichia coli forms reversible fibrils with an atypical secondary structure. JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY. 2019. 294(5). 1590-1601. doi:10.1074/jbc.RA118.005611
Department
Faculty of Engineering/Graduate School of Engineering
Language
English
Web of Science Key ut
WOS:000457879200014