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Role of Small Heat Shock Proteins in the Remodeling of Actin Microfilaments

期刊

BIOCHEMISTRY-MOSCOW
卷 87, 期 8, 页码 800-811

出版社

MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1134/S0006297922080119

关键词

small heat shock proteins; actin; protein-protein interactions; chaperone-like activity; phosphorylation

资金

  1. Russian Science Foundation [20-74-00013]
  2. Interdisciplinary Scientific and Educational School of Moscow State University Molecular Technologies of Living Systems and Synthetic Biology

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Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) play a crucial role in maintaining proteome stability, especially in stabilizing the cytoskeleton and cell contractile apparatus. They interact with various actin-binding proteins, rather than directly binding to actin.
Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) play an important role in the maintenance of proteome stability and, particularly, in stabilization of the cytoskeleton and cell contractile apparatus. Cell exposure to different types of stress is accompanied by the translocation of sHsps onto actin filaments; therefore, it is commonly believed that the sHsps are true actin-binding proteins. Investigations of last years have shown that this assumption is incorrect. Stress-induced translocation of sHsp to actin filaments is not the result of direct interaction of these proteins with intact actin, but results from the chaperone-like activity of sHsps and their interaction with various actin-binding proteins. HspB1 and HspB5 interact with giant elastic proteins titin and filamin thus providing an integrity of the contractile apparatus and its proper localization in the cell. HspB6 binds to the universal adapter protein 14-3-3 and only indirectly affects the structure of actin filament. HspB7 interacts with filamin C and controls actin filament assembly. HspB8 forms tight complex with the universal regulatory and adapter protein Bag3 and participates in the chaperone-assisted selective autophagy (CASA) of actin-binding proteins (e.g., filamin), as well as in the actin-depending processes taking place in mitoses. Hence, the mechanisms of sHsp participation in the maintenance of the contractile apparatus and cytoskeleton are much more complicated and diverse than it has been postulated earlier and are not limited to direct interactions of sHsps with actin. The old hypothesis on the direct binding of sHsps to intact actin should be revised and further detailed investigation on the sHsp interaction with minor proteins participating in the formation and remodeling of actin filaments is required.

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