| Literature DB >> 25036637 |
Mikko Taipale1, George Tucker2, Jian Peng2, Irina Krykbaeva1, Zhen-Yuan Lin3, Brett Larsen3, Hyungwon Choi4, Bonnie Berger2, Anne-Claude Gingras5, Susan Lindquist6.
Abstract
Chaperones are abundant cellular proteins that promote the folding and function of their substrate proteins (clients). In vivo, chaperones also associate with a large and diverse set of cofactors (cochaperones) that regulate their specificity and function. However, how these cochaperones regulate protein folding and whether they have chaperone-independent biological functions is largely unknown. We combined mass spectrometry and quantitative high-throughput LUMIER assays to systematically characterize the chaperone-cochaperone-client interaction network in human cells. We uncover hundreds of chaperone clients, delineate their participation in specific cochaperone complexes, and establish a surprisingly distinct network of protein-protein interactions for cochaperones. As a salient example of the power of such analysis, we establish that NUDC family cochaperones specifically associate with structurally related but evolutionarily distinct β-propeller folds. We provide a framework for deciphering the proteostasis network and its regulation in development and disease and expand the use of chaperones as sensors for drug-target engagement.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25036637 PMCID: PMC4104544 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.05.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582