1 research outputs found
Terminal regions confer plasticity to the tetrameric assembly of human HspB2 and HspB3
Heterogeneity in small heat shock proteins (sHsps) spans multiple spatiotemporal regimes –
from fast fluctuations of part of the protein, to conformational variability of tertiary structure,
plasticity of the interfaces, and polydispersity of the inter-converting, and co-assembling
oligomers. This heterogeneity and dynamic nature of sHsps has significantly hindered their
structural characterisation. Atomic-coordinates are particularly lacking for vertebrate sHsps,
where most available structures are of extensively truncated homomers. sHsps play
important roles in maintaining protein levels in the cell and therefore in organismal health
and disease. HspB2 and HspB3 are vertebrate sHsps that are found co-assembled in
neuromuscular cells, and variants thereof are associated with disease. Here, we present the
structure of human HspB2/B3, which crystallised as a hetero-tetramer in a 3:1 ratio. In the
HspB2/B3 tetramer, the four a-crystallin domains (ACDs) assemble into a flattened
tetrahedron which is pierced by two non-intersecting approximate dyads. Assembly is
mediated by flexible “nuts and bolts” involving IXI/V motifs from terminal regions filling ACD
pockets. Parts of the N-terminal region bind in an unfolded conformation into the anti-parallel
shared ACD dimer grooves. Tracts of the terminal regions are not resolved, most likely due
to their disorder in the crystal lattice. This first structure of a full-length human sHsp
heteromer reveals the heterogeneous interactions of the terminal regions and suggests a
plasticity that is important for the cytoprotective functions of sHsps