1 research outputs found
Pharmacological Tuning of Heat Shock Protein 70 Modulates Polyglutamine Toxicity and Aggregation
Nine neurodegenerative disorders are caused by the abnormal
expansion
of polyglutamine (polyQ) regions within distinct proteins. Genetic
and biochemical evidence has documented that the molecular chaperone,
heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70), modulates polyQ toxicity and aggregation,
yet it remains unclear how Hsp70 might be used as a potential therapeutic
target in polyQ-related diseases. We have utilized a pair of membrane-permeable
compounds that tune the activity of Hsp70 by either stimulating or
by inhibiting its ATPase functions. Using these two pharmacological
agents in both yeast and PC12 cell models of polyQ aggregation and
toxicity, we were surprised to find that stimulating Hsp70 solubilized
polyQ conformers and simultaneously exacerbated polyQ-mediated toxicity.
By contrast, inhibiting Hsp70 ATPase activity protected against polyQ
toxicity and promoted aggregation. These findings clarify the role
of Hsp70 as a possible drug target in polyQ disorders and suggest
that Hsp70 uses ATP hydrolysis to help partition polyQ proteins into
structures with varying levels of proteotoxicity. Our results thus
support an emerging concept in which certain kinds of polyQ aggregates
may be protective, while more soluble polyQ species are toxic