Abstract

Stresses such as heat shock trigger formation of protein aggregates and induction of a disaggregation system composed of molecular chaperones. Recent work reveals that several cases of apparent heat-induced aggregation, long thought to be the result of toxic misfolding, instead reflect evolved, adaptive biomolecular condensation, with chaperone activity contributing to condensate regulation. Here I show that the yeast disaggregation system directly disperses heat-induced biomolecular condensates of endogenous poly(A)-binding protein (Pab1) orders of magnitude more rapidly than aggregates of the most commonly used misfolded model substrate, firefly luciferase. Beyond its efficiency, heat-induced condensate dispersal differs from heat-induced aggregate dispersal in its molecular requirements and mechanistic behavior. This work establishes a bona fide endogenous heat-induced substrate for long-studied heat shock proteins, rigorously isolates a specific example of chaperone regulation of condensates, and underscores needed expansion of the proteotoxic interpretation of the heat shock response to encompass adaptive, chaperone-mediated regulation.

Details

Title
Chaperones Remodel Stress-Induced Biomolecular Condensates
Author
Yoo, Haneul  VIAFID ORCID Logo 
Publication year
2021
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
ISBN
9798759974444
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2614782214
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.