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Experimental Milestones in the Discovery of Molecular Chaperones as Polypeptide Unfolding Enzymes

Authors :
Rayees U.H. Mattoo
Andrija Finka
Pierre Goloubinoff
Kornberg, Rd
Source :
Annual Review of Biochemistry, vol. 85, pp. 715-742
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Annual Reviews, 2016.

Abstract

Molecular chaperones control the cellular folding, assembly, unfolding, disassembly, translocation, activation, inactivation, disaggregation, and degradation of proteins. In 1989, groundbreaking experiments demonstrated that a purified chaperone can bind and prevent the aggregation of artificially unfolded polypeptides and use ATP to dissociate and convert them into native proteins. A decade later, other chaperones were shown to use ATP hydrolysis to unfold and solubilize stable protein aggregates, leading to their native refolding. Presently, the main conserved chaperone families Hsp70, Hsp104, Hsp90, Hsp60, and small heat-shock proteins (sHsps) apparently act as unfolding nanomachines capable of converting functional alternatively folded or toxic misfolded polypeptides into harmless protease-degradable or biologically active native proteins. Being unfoldases, the chaperones can proofread three-dimensional protein structures and thus control protein quality in the cell. Understanding the mechanisms of the cellular unfoldases is central to the design of new therapies against aging, degenerative protein conformational diseases, and specific cancers.

Details

ISSN :
15454509 and 00664154
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annual Review of Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....54a6cf180c4f25cc28bdaff5e6fef370