Hsp104
Hsp104 is a heat-shock protein. It is known to reverse toxicity of mutant α-synuclein, TDP-43, FUS, and TAF15 in yeast cells. Conserved in prokaryotes, fungi, plants and as well as animal mitochondria, there is yet to see hsp104 in multicellular animals. Hsp104 is classified as a. AAA+ ATPases and a subgroup of Hsp100/Clp, because of the usage of Atp hydrolysis for structural modulation of other proteins. Hsp104 is not needed for normal cell growth but when exposed to stress there is an increasing amount. Removing the aggregates without the hsp104 is insufficient there highlighting the importance of this heat shock protein and its interactions.
Structure
Hsp104 monomer is composed of two NBDs NBD1 and NBD2 which communicate through allosteric communication. Located on the C-terminus of NBD1 there are around 125 residues that link both NBDs. In hsp104 NBD1 is where ATP hydrolysis occurs, NBD2 C-terminus is shown to express the configuration of the structure by nucleotide-dependent hexamerazation. These NBDs have diaphragms, which are conserved loops that interact in the middle of the channel inside the chaperone by coupling the ATP hydrolysis and polypeptide transport. Coupling of this reaction is needed as without the coupling it is an energetically unfavorable reaction. These conserved loops contain conserved Tyr residues that are crucial for binding to substrates.The Hsp104 homohexamer is a part of an unfolding/threading mechanism that aggregates pass through and single polypeptides are extracted. Presence of ATP, ADP allows the formation of the Hsp104 monomers to homohexamer complexes. Through the hexamer complex, the monomers communicate and make ATPhydrolysis from hsp104 hexamerization. This ATP hydrolysis allows hsp104 to interact with substrates.
Expression inducers
Stressors that induce Hsp104 expression include:- Heat or cold shock
- Hydrogen peroxide
- Ethanol
- Sodium Arsenide
Interactions