Literature DB >> 10585970

Stress genes and proteins in the archaea.

A J Macario1, M Lange, B K Ahring, E Conway de Macario.   

Abstract

The field covered in this review is new; the first sequence of a gene encoding the molecular chaperone Hsp70 and the first description of a chaperonin in the archaea were reported in 1991. These findings boosted research in other areas beyond the archaea that were directly relevant to bacteria and eukaryotes, for example, stress gene regulation, the structure-function relationship of the chaperonin complex, protein-based molecular phylogeny of organisms and eukaryotic-cell organelles, molecular biology and biochemistry of life in extreme environments, and stress tolerance at the cellular and molecular levels. In the last 8 years, archaeal stress genes and proteins belonging to the families Hsp70, Hsp60 (chaperonins), Hsp40(DnaJ), and small heat-shock proteins (sHsp) have been studied. The hsp70(dnaK), hsp40(dnaJ), and grpE genes (the chaperone machine) have been sequenced in seven, four, and two species, respectively, but their expression has been examined in detail only in the mesophilic methanogen Methanosarcina mazei S-6. The proteins possess markers typical of bacterial homologs but none of the signatures distinctive of eukaryotes. In contrast, gene expression and transcription initiation signals and factors are of the eucaryal type, which suggests a hybrid archaeal-bacterial complexion for the Hsp70 system. Another remarkable feature is that several archaeal species in different phylogenetic branches do not have the gene hsp70(dnaK), an evolutionary puzzle that raises the important question of what replaces the product of this gene, Hsp70(DnaK), in protein biogenesis and refolding and for stress resistance. Although archaea are prokaryotes like bacteria, their Hsp60 (chaperonin) family is of type (group) II, similar to that of the eukaryotic cytosol; however, unlike the latter, which has several different members, the archaeal chaperonin system usually includes only two (in some species one and in others possibly three) related subunits of approximately 60 kDa. These form, in various combinations depending on the species, a large structure or chaperonin complex sometimes called the thermosome. This multimolecular assembly is similar to the bacterial chaperonin complex GroEL/S, but it is made of only the large, double-ring oligomers each with eight (or nine) subunits instead of seven as in the bacterial complex. Like Hsp70(DnaK), the archaeal chaperonin subunits are remarkable for their evolution, but for a different reason. Ubiquitous among archaea, the chaperonins show a pattern of recurrent gene duplication-hetero-oligomeric chaperonin complexes appear to have evolved several times independently. The stress response and stress tolerance in the archaea involve chaperones, chaperonins, other heat shock (stress) proteins including sHsp, thermoprotectants, the proteasome, as yet incompletely understood thermoresistant features of many molecules, and formation of multicellular structures. The latter structures include single- and mixed-species (bacterial-archaeal) types. Many questions remain unanswered, and the field offers extraordinary opportunities owing to the diversity, genetic makeup, and phylogenetic position of archaea and the variety of ecosystems they inhabit. Specific aspects that deserve investigation are elucidation of the mechanism of action of the chaperonin complex at different temperatures, identification of the partners and substitutes for the Hsp70 chaperone machine, analysis of protein folding and refolding in hyperthermophiles, and determination of the molecular mechanisms involved in stress gene regulation in archaeal species that thrive under widely different conditions (temperature, pH, osmolarity, and barometric pressure). These studies are now possible with uni- and multicellular archaeal models and are relevant to various areas of basic and applied research, including exploration and conquest of ecosystems inhospitable to humans and many mammals and plants.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10585970      PMCID: PMC98981          DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.63.4.923-967.1999

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev        ISSN: 1092-2172            Impact factor:   11.056


  281 in total

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Journal:  Nat Struct Biol       Date:  1999-07

2.  Global unfolding of a substrate protein by the Hsp100 chaperone ClpA.

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  1999-09-02       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  An archaebacterial ATPase, homologous to ATPases in the eukaryotic 26 S proteasome, activates protein breakdown by 20 S proteasomes.

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Review 4.  Proteolysis and chaperones: the destruction/reconstruction dilemma.

Authors:  C Herman; R D'Ari
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5.  PROSITE: a dictionary of sites and patterns in proteins.

Authors:  A Bairoch
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1992-05-11       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  Human homologues of the bacterial heat-shock protein DnaJ are preferentially expressed in neurons.

Authors:  M E Cheetham; J P Brion; B H Anderton
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1992-06-01       Impact factor: 3.857

7.  Two empires or three?

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1998-08-18       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Cloning and sequencing of a cluster of genes encoding novel enzymes of trehalose biosynthesis from thermophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus acidocaldarius.

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Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  1996-12-06

9.  The molecular chaperonin TF55 from the Thermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus. A biochemical and structural characterization.

Authors:  S Knapp; I Schmidt-Krey; H Hebert; T Bergman; H Jörnvall; R Ladenstein
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  1994-09-30       Impact factor: 5.469

10.  Group II chaperonin in a thermophilic methanogen, Methanococcus thermolithotrophicus. Chaperone activity and filament-forming ability.

Authors:  M Furutani; T Iida; T Yoshida; T Maruyama
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1998-10-23       Impact factor: 5.157

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  45 in total

1.  Redundancy, antiredundancy, and the robustness of genomes.

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-01-29       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Alpha-crystallin-type heat shock proteins: socializing minichaperones in the context of a multichaperone network.

Authors:  Franz Narberhaus
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 11.056

3.  Molecular characterization of genes encoding cytosolic Hsp70s in the zygomycete fungus Rhizopus nigricans.

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Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 3.667

Review 4.  Extreme secretion: protein translocation across the archael plasma membrane.

Authors:  Gabriela Ring; Jerry Eichler
Journal:  J Bioenerg Biomembr       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 2.945

5.  Reverse gyrase has heat-protective DNA chaperone activity independent of supercoiling.

Authors:  Martin Kampmann; Daniela Stock
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2004-07-06       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  A combinatorial NMR and EPR approach for evaluating the structural ensemble of partially folded proteins.

Authors:  Jampani Nageswara Rao; Christine C Jao; Balachandra G Hegde; Ralf Langen; Tobias S Ulmer
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2010-06-30       Impact factor: 15.419

Review 7.  Diversity in transcripts and translational pattern of stress proteins in marine extremophiles.

Authors:  I V Ambily Nath; P A Loka Bharathi
Journal:  Extremophiles       Date:  2011-01-06       Impact factor: 2.395

8.  Survival of methanogenic archaea from Siberian permafrost under simulated Martian thermal conditions.

Authors:  Daria Morozova; Diedrich Möhlmann; Dirk Wagner
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2006-12-12       Impact factor: 1.950

9.  Transcriptional analysis of the hsp70 gene in a haloarchaeon Natrinema sp. J7 under heat and cold stress.

Authors:  Hao Zhang; Peng Cui; Lu Lin; Ping Shen; Bing Tang; Yu-Ping Huang
Journal:  Extremophiles       Date:  2009-05-16       Impact factor: 2.395

10.  Novel insights into gene regulation of the rudivirus SIRV2 infecting Sulfolobus cells.

Authors:  Ebru Okutan; Ling Deng; Saideh Mirlashari; Kristine Uldahl; Mayada Halim; Chao Liu; Roger A Garrett; Qunxin She; Xu Peng
Journal:  RNA Biol       Date:  2013-04-12       Impact factor: 4.652

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