| Literature DB >> 34010483 |
Jeremy J Ryan1, Aaron Bao1, Braxton Bell1, Cendi Ling1, Meredith E Jackrel1.
Abstract
Hsp104, a yeast protein disaggregase, can be potentiated via numerous missense mutations at disparate locations throughout the coiled-coil middle domain (MD). Potentiated Hsp104 variants can counter the toxicity and misfolding of TDP-43, FUS, and α-synuclein, proteins which are implicated in neurodegenerative disorders. However, potentiated MD variants typically exhibit off-target toxicity. Further, it has remained confounding how numerous degenerate mutations confer potentiation, hampering engineering of therapeutic Hsp104 variants. Here, we sought to comprehensively define the key drivers of Hsp104 potentiation. Using scanning mutagenesis, we iteratively studied the effects of modulation at each position in the Hsp104 MD. Screening this library to identify enhanced variants reveals that missense mutations at 26% of positions in the MD yield variants that counter FUS toxicity. Modulation of the helix 2-helix 3/4 MD interface potentiates Hsp104, whereas mutations in the analogous helix 1-2 interface do not. Surprisingly, we find that there is a higher likelihood of enhancing Hsp104 activity against human disease substrates than impairing Hsp104 native function. We find that single mutations can broadly destabilize the MD structure and lead to functional potentiation, suggesting this may be a common mechanism conferring Hsp104 potentiation. Using this approach, we have demonstrated that modulation of the MD can yield engineered variants with decreased off-target effects.Entities:
Keywords: Hsp104; TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43); alpha-synuclein; amyloid; fused in sarcoma; protein disaggregase; protein misfolding
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34010483 PMCID: PMC8284572 DOI: 10.1002/pro.4126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Sci ISSN: 0961-8368 Impact factor: 6.993