| Literature DB >> 26473735 |
Navinder Kumar1, Deepika Gaur1, Arpit Gupta1, Anuradhika Puri1, Deepak Sharma1.
Abstract
The role of Hsp70 chaperones in yeast prion propagation is well established. Highly conserved Hsp90 chaperones participate in a number of cellular processes, such as client protein maturation, protein degradation, cellular signalling and apoptosis, but little is known about their role in propagation of infectious prion like aggregates. Here, we examine the influence of Hsp90 in the maintenance of yeast prion [URE3] which is a prion form of native protein Ure2, and reveal a previously unknown role of Hsp90 as an important regulator of [URE3] stability. We show that the C-terminal MEEVD pentapeptide motif, but not the client maturation activity of Hsp90, is essential for [URE3] prion stability. In testing deletions of various Hsp90 co-chaperones known to bind this motif, we find the immunophilin homolog Cpr7 is essential for [URE3] propagation. We show that Cpr7 interacts with Ure2 and enhances its fibrillation. The requirement of Cpr7 is specific for [URE3] as its deletion does not antagonize both strong and weak variant of another yeast prion [PSI+], suggesting a distinct role of the Hsp90 co-chaperone with different yeast prions. Our data show that, similar to the Hsp70 family, the Hsp90 chaperones also influence yeast prion maintenance, and that immunophilins could regulate protein multimerization independently of their activity as peptidyl-prolyl isomerases.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26473735 PMCID: PMC4608684 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1005567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1Deleting the MEEVD motif of Hsp90 destabilizes [URE3].
(A) Effect of deletion and overexpression of Hsp90 on [URE3]. Hsp82Δ (SY295) or Hsc82Δ (SY297) cells grown overnight were subcultured into YPAD medium and grown from O.D.600nm of 0.02 to 1.7. Cells were then plated onto ½ YPD plates and monitored after 3 days of incubation at 30°C. For overexpression studies, SY187 was transformed with plasmid (pRS426PGPD-His6-Hsp82 or pRS426PGPD-His6-Hsc82) encoding His6-Hsp82 or His6-Hsc82 and plated onto uracil deficient solid SD medium with limiting adenine. As seen by white colony color phenotype, no adverse effect on [URE3] stability was observed upon deletion or overexpression of Hsp90 isoforms. (B) The strains constructed as described in Materials and Methods express the indicated Hsp90 isoform as the sole cytosolic Hsp90. Cells were grown from O.D.600nm of 0.02 to 1.7 before plating onto ½ YPD medium. As seen by red colony color phenotype the frequency of [ure-o] colonies increases upon deletion of MEEVD motif.
Fig 2Cpr7 is required for [URE3] stability.
(A) Effect of deleting genes encoding Hsp90 co-chaperones on prion propagation. Multiple single-knockout strains constructed as described in Materials and Methods were streaked onto a ½ YPD plate and [URE3] was monitored after 3 days of incubation at 30°C and 2 days at room temperature. As seen, the deletion of gene encoding Cpr7 leads to [ure-o] phenotype. (B) Cells were grown in YPAD liquid medium, further grown from O.D.600nm = 0.02 to 1.7 and then plated on ½ YPD. The colonies were then replica-plated onto ½ YPD and adenine deficient plates. As seen, though SY187 [URE3] cells grow normally on adenine deficient medium, only about 2–3% of colonies from cpr7Δ strain grew on solid medium lacking adenine. (C) The effect of Hsp90 co-chaperone deletion on [PSI ] propagation. Deletion strains of the ade2-1 background were assessed as in panel (A). (D) [URE3] diploid strain heterozygous for cpr7Δ (CPR7/cpr7::KanMX) was sporulated and dissected. [URE3] phenotype segregated 2:2 and all cpr7Δ (G418 resistant) spores were found to be [ure-o] as seen by red colony color phenotype.
Fig 3The loss of [URE3] upon Cpr7 deletion is not due to altered expression of other major chaperones.
(A) Yeast lysates from wild type (wt) [URE3], wild type [ure-o] and cpr7Δ strains were probed with antibodies against Ydj1, Sse1 and Hsp90. The chaperones were found to be expressed at similar levels in the strains examined. Loading control is same blot stained with amido-black. (B) 5μg (1X) or 10μg (2X) of total lysate protein was loaded into each lane and probed with anti Hsp70 antibodies. As seen, increased Hsp70 level was observed in strain lacking Cpr7 as compared to wt [URE3] or wt [ure-o] strains. (C) SY187(wt) expressing additional Ssa Hsp70 from transformed plasmids pRS315PSSA2-SSA1/SSA2/SSA3/SSA4 or pRS315 empty vector were spread onto leucine deficient SD solid medium with limiting adenine. As seen by white colony color phenotype of transformants, the increased expression of Ssa Hsp70 supports stable [URE3].
Fig 4Cpr7 tetratricopeptide domain is important for [URE3] prion propagation.
(A) Schematic of domain architecture of Cpr6, Cpr7 and their hybrid proteins. (B) Strains expressing Cpr6, Cpr7 or hybrids in cpr7Δ genetic background were constructed and monitored for [URE3] as described in Fig 1A. ½ YPD plates were further replicated onto SD lacking histidine (SD, -His) or adenine (SD, -Ade). Shown is the growth after 1day (1D) or 2 days (2D) of incubation at 30°C after replica plating from ½ YPD plate. As seen by white colony color phenotype cells expressing Cpr7, 6PPI/7TPR or 7TPR support stable [URE3]. Red colony color phenotype is seen only in those colonies that either lost the transformed plasmid (due to growth on ½ YPD), harbour empty plasmid or the plasmid encoding for Cpr6, 7PPI/6TPR.
Fig 5Cns1 complements Cpr7 function required for [URE3] stability.
The cpr7Δ strain was transformed with pRS426PCNS1-CNS1 or pRS413PTEF-CPR7, and [URE3] was monitored on ½ YPD plates as described before. All colonies harbouring the Cns1 encoding plasmid show white colony color suggesting functional redundancy of Cns1 and Cpr7 with regard to [URE3] propagation.
Fig 6Cpr7 interacts with Ure2.
The purified His6-Cpr7 was adsorbed onto Cobalt metal affinity resin and further incubated with yeast lysate expressing either Hsp82 or Hsp82ΔMEEVD as sole Hsp90. Upon washing, the fraction bound to His6-Cpr7 was eluted with 25mM EDTA, and analyzed for Ure2 and Hsp90 using anti-Ure2 and anti-Hsp90 antibodies, respectively. His6-Cpr7 was probed with anti-His6 antibody.
Fig 7Cpr7 enhances in vitro fibrillization of Ure2.
Purified Ure2 (48 μM) was incubated at 37°C with and without Cpr6, Cpr7 or 7TPR (30 μM each) and 500μM ThioflavinT. The ThT fluorescence was monitored at 485nm upon excitation at 450nm. As seen, ThT fluorescence intensity was further enhanced upon incubation of Ure2 with Cpr7 or 7TPR.
| Strains | Genotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| SY187 |
| Sharma |
| NY01 |
| This study |
| MR194 |
| Masison’s lab |
| MR195 |
| Masison’s lab |
| SY295 |
| This study |
| SY297 |
| This study |
| SY136 |
| Sharma |
| 776-6A |
| Jung |
| NY02 |
| This study |
| NY03 |
| This study |
| NY04 |
| This study |
| NY05 |
| This study |
| NY06 |
| This study |
| NY07 |
| This study |
| NY14 |
| This study |
| NY15 |
| This study |
| NY16 |
| This study |
| NY17 |
| This study |
| SY269 |
| This study |
| DD168 |
| This study |
| DD169 |
| This study |
| DD170 |
| This study |
| DD171 |
| This study |
| DD172 |
| This study |
| AY3 |
| This study |
| AY4 |
| This study |
| AY5 |
| This study |
| AY6 |
| This study |
| AY7 |
| This study |
| AY8 |
| This study |
| AY9 |
| This study |
| 1566 |
| Masison’s lab |
| 1567 |
| Masison’s lab |
| AY11 |
| This study |
| AY12 |
| This study |
| Plasmid | Marker | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| pRS413PTEF-CPR7 | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-CPR6 | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-6PPI/7TPR | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-7PPI/6TPR | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-7TPR | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS316PCPR7-CPR7 | URA3 | This study |
| pRS316PCPR6-CPR6 | URA3 | This study |
| pRS426PCNS1-CNS1 | URA3 | This study |
| pKT41-URE2 | Ampicillin | Sharma |
| pET29bHTV-CPR6 | Kanamycin | This study |
| pET29bHTV-CPR7 | Kanamycin | This study |
| pET29bHTV-7TPR | Kanamycin | This study |
| pRS426PGPD-His6-HSP82 | URA3 | This study |
| pRS426PGPD-His6-HSC82 | URA3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-His6-HSP82 | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-HSP82 | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-His6-HSP82ΔMEEVD | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-HSP82ΔMEEVD | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-His6-HSP82Δ211–264 | HIS3 | This study |
| pRS316PHSP82-HSP82 | URA3 | This study |
| pRS315PSSA2-SSA1 | LEU2 | Sharma & Masison, 2008 |
| pRS315PSSA2-SSA2 | LEU2 | Sharma & Masison, 2008 |
| pRS315PSSA2-SSA3 | LEU2 | Sharma & Masison, 2008 |
| pRS315PSSA2-SSA4 | LEU2 | Sharma & Masison, 2008 |
| pRS316PGAL1-FLAG-vSrc | URA3 | This study |
| pRS426PGPD-GFP | URA3 | This study |
| pRS426PGPD-URE2-GFP | URA3 | This study |
| pRS413PTEF-His6-CPR7 | HIS3 | This study |