Common
Stress protein Hsp12 provides a cellular survival mechanism never seen before
Despite clear evidence that Hsp12 - a so-called heat shock or stress protein - helps cells survive life-threatening conditions, how it works was an open question until now. The surprising answer is revealed in the Aug. 27 issue of Molecular Cell, where German researchers explain how they discovered the function of Hsp12, a protective mechanism unlike any previously observed. Unfolded within the cell's aqueous cytosol, Hsp12 folds into helical structures to stabilize the cell membrane.
One way the single-celled model organism S. cerevisiae, brewer's
yeast, responds to stress is to increase production of Hsp12 several
hundred times. This evidence that Hsp12 must have a protective
function, together with its small molecular mass, led to its
classification with other heat shock proteins (HSPs). Yet an exhaustive
investigation led by Munich-based researchers has revealed that Hsp12
is structurally and functionally different from every other stress
protein that has been studied before. The scientists say that Hsp12
defines an entirely new class of stress proteins in which it stands, at
least for now, alone.
"This is a new concept for protecting cells against stress," says
Johannes Buchner, professor of chemistry at the Technische Universität
München (TUM) and a member of the Munich Center for Integrated Protein
Science. "This is the most abundant protein in the yeast S. cerevisiae
under stress - not only heat, but different kinds of stress - and we
found that it does not protect other proteins from unfolding or
aggregation as other HSPs do. Instead, it binds to membranes and
stabilizes them against rupture and leakiness."
Unlike other stress proteins, Buchner and his collaborators observed,
Hsp12 is completely unfolded in its native state. They found that it
exists both in solution, in the yeast cell's aqueous cytosol, and in
association with the cell's outer wall, the plasma membrane. Its
protective mechanism appears to work in the following way: As Hsp12
synthesis increases in response to stress, the higher concentration of
the protein brings more of it into contact with the membrane;
interacting with the membrane, Hsp12 folds, forming helical structures
that become partially embedded in it. The Hsp12 helices bind to
specific kinds of lipids, but evidently not in such a way as to change
the membrane's composition; instead, these interactions appear to
change the way the membrane is organized, enhancing its integrity and
stability. The transformation of Hsp12 from its unfolded state in
solution to its folded state as a membrane chaperone appears to be
completely reversible.
This remarkable mechanism was uncovered step by step through a long and
complex series of experiments, most of which involved "wild type" S.
cerevisiae and a "knockout" strain of yeast that could not synthesize
Hsp12. The interdisciplinary research team brought more than a dozen
advanced analytical methods into play, as each discovery along the way
raised new questions that had to be answered.
The researchers found that the cellular survival mechanism provided by
Hsp12 functioned under several different kinds of assault, including
heat shock, oxidative stress, and osmotic stress - a sudden change in
the solution surrounding a cell that challenges its ability to regulate
the flow of water through the membrane. Results of aging experiments
showed a protective function as well. The current paper in Molecular
Cell also presents evidence that Hsp12 enhances the health of yeast
cells under normal physiological conditions.
Further intriguing questions always grow out of discoveries in yeast,
because other eukaryotes - including humans - share so much of this
model organism's evolutionary inheritance. How highly conserved and how
widely spread is the newly discovered protective mechanism of Hsp12?
When did it develop, in what kind of organism? Is it unique to S.
cerevisiae? If it exists in other organisms, does it function in a
similar way? The Munich-based team used bioinformatic genome searches
to extend their investigation in this direction, but without reaching
conclusive answers. The researchers did find that the DNA sequences of
other fungi code for proteins that could be considered Hsp12 "family
members," and they identified one protein in human neurons that may
have similar features.
This research was supported by grants from the German Research
Foundation (DFG), the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie, and the CompInt
project of the Elitenetzwerk Bayern, as well as by the Excellence
Cluster Munich Center for Integrated Protein Science (CIPSM) and the
TUM Institute for Advanced Study.
Contact:
Prof. Johannes Buchner
Department of Chemistry
Technische Universität München
Lichtenbergstr. 4 85747 Garching, Germany
E-mail: johannes.buchner@ch.tum.de
Tel: +49 89 289 13341
Fax: +49 89 289 13345
Free image:
http://mediatum2.ub.tum.de/node?id=993358
Original publication:
Sylvia Welker, Birgit Rudolph, Elke Frenzel, Franz Hagn, Gerhard
Liebisch, Gerd Schmitz, Johannes Scheuring, Andreas Kerth, Alfred
Blume, Sevil Weinkauf, Martin Haslbeck, and Johannes Buchner: "Hsp 12
Is an Intrinsically Unstructured Stress Protein which Folds upon
Membrane Association and Modulates Membrane Function." Molecular Cell
39, 507-520, August 27, 2010. DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2010.08.001.
Source: Munich Technical University (TUM)
