| Literature DB >> 27630992 |
Peter Bross1, Paula Fernandez-Guerra1.
Abstract
Heat shock protein 60 (HSP60) forms together with heat shock protein 10 (HSP10) double-barrel chaperonin complexes that are essential for folding to the native state of proteins in the mitochondrial matrix space. Two extremely rare monogenic disorders have been described that are caused by missense mutations in the HSPD1 gene that encodes the HSP60 subunit of the HSP60/HSP10 chaperonin complex. Investigations of the molecular mechanisms underlying these disorders have revealed that different degrees of reduced HSP60 function produce distinct neurological phenotypes. While mutations with deleterious or strong dominant negative effects are not compatible with life, HSPD1 gene variations found in the human population impair HSP60 function and depending on the mechanism and degree of HSP60 dys- and mal-function cause different phenotypes. We here summarize the knowledge on the effects of disturbances of the function of the HSP60/HSP10 chaperonin complex by disease-associated mutations.Entities:
Keywords: HSP60; chaperonin; gene variation; mitochondria; neurological disease; protein folding problem
Year: 2016 PMID: 27630992 PMCID: PMC5006179 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2016.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Figure 1Position of gene variations in the Structure of the HSP60/HSP10 complex and position of mutations. 3d structure representations were created based on PDB coordinates 4pj1 (Nisemblat et al., 2015) using the software Discovery Studio 4.5.0.15071 (Biovia). Left: surface representation of the structure of the HSP60/HSP10 complex; HSP60 and HSP10 rings are indicated. The surface representation of one subunit of the upper HSP60 ring is shown transparent and the carbon backbone and space filling representation of amino acid positions where missense variations have been found are shown. Middle: upside view of the upper HSP60 ring. Right: enlarged view of the highlighted subunit from the complex shown on the left with numbering of positions with missense variations. The mutations p.Gly559Asp and p.Gly563Ala are not shown because the C-terminal part of the HSP60 protein is not contained in the crystal structure. The bound ATP molecule is shown as yellow sticks. (B) Exon structure of the human HSPD1 and HSPE1 genes encoding HSP60 and HSP10. The two genes are situated in a head to head configuration on chromosome 2 with a common bidirectional promoter (red arrows). Exons are numbered and their coding parts are given as broad bars. Positions of missense variations are shown; color coding is in relation to disease-association (see text).
Missense variations in the .
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| p.Asp29Gly | MitCHAP60 | Slow, temperature-sensitive | 0 | benign | Magen et al., |
| p.Leu46Phe | Not tested | 29 | possibly damaging | ExAC | |
| p.Val98Ile | SPG13 | No growth | 0 | possibly damaging | Hansen et al., |
| p.Arg142Lys | Not tested | 56 | benign | ExAC | |
| p.Lys156Arg | Not tested | 17 | benign | ExAC | |
| p.Asn184Ser | Unaffected | 61 | benign | Hansen et al., | |
| p.Asn265Ser | Not tested | 23 | possibly damaging | ExAC | |
| p.Leu291Val | Not tested | 12 | probably damaging | ExAC | |
| p.Arg370His | Not tested | 13 | benign | ExAC | |
| p.Asp379Gly | Unaffected | 0 | benign | Bross et al., | |
| p.Gln461Glu | SPG13* | Impaired | 0 | probably damaging | Hansen et al., |
| p.Gly559Asp | Unaffected | 0 | possibly damaging | Bross et al., | |
| p.Gly563Ala | Unaffected | 1904 | probably damaging | Bross et al., |
Missense variations recorded in the literature and/or in the ExAC consortium database with ≥10 alleles are shown. The basis for scoring growth in the genetic complementation assay is explained in Section Functional analysis in vivo. Prediction of possible impact of amino acid substitutions was performed using the PolyPhen-2 webserver (Adzhubei et al., .
PolyPhen-2 has three prediction output options, from the highest probability score for being damaging to the lowest: “probably damaging,” “possibly damaging” and “benign.” The asterisk denotes that the variation/disease relationship for the p.Gln461Glu variation is not fully established. For further details see text.