
Sara Linse
Professor

The chaperone-like activity of a small heat shock protein is lost after sulfoxidation of conserved methionines in a surface-exposed amphipathic α-helix
Author
Summary, in English
The small heat shock proteins (sHsps) possess a chaperone-like activity which prevents aggregation of other proteins during transient heat or oxidative stress. The sHsps bind, onto their surface, molten globule forms of other proteins, thereby keeping them in a refolding competent state. In Hsp21, a chloroplast-located sHsp in all higher plants, there is a highly conserved region forming an amphipathic α-helix with several methionines on the hydrophobic side according to secondary structure prediction. This paper describes how sulfoxidation of the methionines in this amphipathic α-helix caused conformational changes and a reduction in the Hsp21 oligomer size, and a complete loss of the chaperone-like activity. Concomitantly, there was a loss of an outer-surface located α-helix as determined by limited proteolysis and circular dichroism spectroscopy. The present data indicate that the methionine-rich amphipathic α-helix, a motif of unknown physiological significance which evolved during the land plant evolution, is crucial for binding of substrate proteins and has rendered the chaperone-like activity of Hsp21 very dependent on the chloroplast redox state.
Department/s
- Biochemistry and Structural Biology
Publishing year
2001
Language
English
Pages
227-237
Publication/Series
BBA - Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology
Volume
1545
Issue
1-2
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Elsevier
Topic
- Biological Sciences
Keywords
- Small heat shock protein
- Methionine sulfoxidation
- Chaperone
- Oligomer
- Amphipathic α-helix
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0167-4838