| Literature DB >> 24278676 |
Abstract
Small heat shock proteins (small Hsps) are stress-induced molecular chaperones that act as holdases towards polypeptides that have lost their folding in stress conditions or consequently of mutations in their coding sequence. A cellular protection against the deleterious effects mediated by damaged proteins is thus provided to cells. These chaperones are also highly expressed in response to protein conformational and inflammatory diseases and cancer pathologies. Through specific and reversible modifications in their phospho-oligomeric organization, small Hsps can chaperone appropriate client proteins in order to provide cells with resistance to different types of injuries or pathological conditions. By helping cells to better cope with their pathological status, their expression can be either beneficial, such as in diseases characterized by pathological cell degeneration, or deleterious when they are required for tumor cell survival. Moreover, small Hsps are actively released by cells and can act as immunogenic molecules that have dual effects depending on the pathology. The cellular consequences linked to their expression levels and relationships with other Hsps as well as therapeutic strategies are discussed in view of their dynamic structural organization required to interact with specific client polypeptides.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24278676 PMCID: PMC3820616 DOI: 10.6064/2012/185641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Figure 1Small Hsps. (a) Organization of human HspB1 (Hsp27) and HspB5 (αB-crystallin) protein sequences. N-terminal gray box: WD/EPF domain; N-terminal white box: conserved sequence; black box: alpha crystallin domain; C-terminal gray box: IXI/V motif; the C-terminal flexible domain is also indicated. P: phosphorylated serine residues. Amino acids number is indicated. (b) Description of the members of the human small heat shock family of proteins. The distant Hsp16.2 polypeptide contains only a fraction of the alpha-crystallin domain. Chaperone activity and inducibility by heat shock are indicated. (c) Tissue-specific expression of constitutive small Hsps (compilation of murine as well as some human data).
Beneficial and deleterious roles of small Hsps. Schematic illustration of the dual role of intracellular and extracellular small Hsps as well as autoantibodies against these proteins.
| Beneficial role | Deleterious role | |
|---|---|---|
| Neurodegenerations | ||
| Myopathies | ||
| Cardioprotection | Intracellular small Hsps | |
| Cataracts | Cancers | |
| Strokes | ||
| Asthma | ||
| Inflammatory disease | ||
|
| ||
| Atherosclerosis | Extracellular, circulating small Hsps | Tumor progression |
|
| ||
| Avoid propagation of insults | Facilitate retinal apoptosis | |
| Autoantibodies | Psoriasis | |
| Autoimmune diseases | ||