| Literature DB >> 35269451 |
Hong Zhang1,2, Weibin Gong1, Si Wu1,2, Sarah Perrett1,2.
Abstract
Cellular redox homeostasis is precisely balanced by generation and elimination of reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS are not only capable of causing oxidation of proteins, lipids and DNA to damage cells but can also act as signaling molecules to modulate transcription factors and epigenetic pathways that determine cell survival and death. Hsp70 proteins are central hubs for proteostasis and are important factors to ameliorate damage from different kinds of stress including oxidative stress. Hsp70 members often participate in different cellular signaling pathways via their clients and cochaperones. ROS can directly cause oxidative cysteine modifications of Hsp70 members to alter their structure and chaperone activity, resulting in changes in the interactions between Hsp70 and their clients or cochaperones, which can then transfer redox signals to Hsp70-related signaling pathways. On the other hand, ROS also activate some redox-related signaling pathways to indirectly modulate Hsp70 activity and expression. Post-translational modifications including phosphorylation together with elevated Hsp70 expression can expand the capacity of Hsp70 to deal with ROS-damaged proteins and support antioxidant enzymes. Knowledge about the response and role of Hsp70 in redox homeostasis will facilitate our understanding of the cellular knock-on effects of inhibitors targeting Hsp70 and the mechanisms of redox-related diseases and aging.Entities:
Keywords: Hsp70; ROS; cysteine modifications; glutathionylation; oxidative stress; redox homeostasis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35269451 PMCID: PMC8909019 DOI: 10.3390/cells11050829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Redox-regulated cellular signaling [5].
| Cellular Processes | Critical Signaling Molecules Modified by ROS |
|---|---|
| proliferation and survival | mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase (PI3K), phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome ten (PTEN) and protein tyrosine phosphatases |
| redox homeostasis | thioredoxin, peroxiredoxin, redox factor-1 (Ref-1) and Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1)/nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) |
| mitochondrial oxidative stress and aging | p66Shc |
| iron homeostasis | iron response element–iron regulatory protein (IRE-IRP) containing iron–sulfur cluster |
| DNA damage response | ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) |
Figure 1Scheme of Hsp70 in redox homeostasis. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) often cause extensive cysteine modifications of proteins and disturb proteostasis, which can activate the heat shock response (HSR) and Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1)/nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) pathways by activation of heat shock transcription factor 1 (Hsf1) and redox-sensitive transcription factor Nrf2. ROS also widely modify different cellular signaling pathways. Hsp70s are involved in redox homeostasis in several aspects: (a) ROS can cause cysteine modifications of Hsp70s to modify their functions; (b) activation of Hsf1 and Nrf2 elevate expression of HSP70s; (c) Hsp70s work as central hubs in the protein quality control network to maintain proteostasis, including eliminating oxidized proteins and regulating activity, expression and degradation of antioxidant enzymes to contribute to redox homeostasis; and (d) Hsp70s are involved in redox-related signaling pathways, leading to phosphorylation or upregulated expression of Hsp70s.
Cysteine residues in bacteria, yeast and human Hsp70 homologs.
| Hsp70 Homolog | Cysteine Residues (Entry in UniProtKB) |
|---|---|
| Cys15 (P0A6Y8) | |
| Cys315, Cys448 (P0A6Z1) | |
| Cys236, Cys242, Cys261, Cys344, Cys360 (P77319) | |
| Cys15, Cys264, Cys303 (P10591) | |
| Cys15, Cys264, Cys303 (P10592) | |
| Cys15, Cys304 (P09435) | |
| Cys15, Cys304 (P22202) | |
| Cys20, Cys435, Cys454 (P11484) | |
| Cys20, Cys454 (P40150) | |
| Cys142, Cys211, Cys228, Cys380, Cys484 (P32589) | |
| Cys142, Cys211, Cys380, Cys484 (P32590) | |
| Cys81, Cys86 (P38788) | |
| None (P0CS90) | |
| Cys134 (Q05931) | |
| None (P39987) | |
| Cys63 (P16474) | |
| Cys520, Cys545, Cys547 (P36016) | |
| Human HspA1A (Hsp72) (cytosol, nucleus, cell membrane, extracellular exosomes) | Cys17, Cys267, Cys306, Cys574, Cys603 (P0DMV8) |
| Human HspA1B (Hsp72) (cytosol, nucleus, extracellular exosomes) | Cys17, Cys267, Cys306, Cys574, Cys603 (P0DMV9) |
| Human HspA1L (cytosol, nucleus) | Cys19, Cys269, Cys308, Cys576, Cys605, Cys617, Cys622 (P34931) |
| Human HspA2 (cytosol, nucleus, cell membrane, extracellular exosomes) | Cys18, Cys191, Cys270, Cys577, Cys606 (P54652) |
| Human HspA4 (Apg2) (cytosol, extracellular exosome, mitochondrion, nucleus) | Cys13, Cys34, Cys38, Cys140, Cys146, Cys167, Cys213, Cys245, Cys270, Cys290, Cys310, Cys376, Cys380, Cys417, Cys779 (P34932) |
| Human HspA4L (Apg1, Osp94) (cytosol, nucleus) | Cys13, Cys34, Cys38, Cys140, Cys167, Cys213, Cys245, Cys270, Cys290, Cys310, Cys376, Cys380, Cys417, Cys421, Cys540, Cys589, Cys740, Cys782 (O95757) |
| Human HspA5 (BiP, Grp78) (ER, extracellular exosomes) | Cys41, Cys420 (P11021) |
| Human HspA6 (Hsp70B’) (cytosol, extracellular exosomes) | Cys19, Cys108, Cys269, Cys308, Cys387, Cys576, Cys605, Cys624 (P17066) |
| Human HspA7 (Hsp70B) (blood microparticles, extracellular exosomes) | Cys19, Cys108, Cys269, Cys308 (P48741) |
| human HspA8 (Hsc70, Hsc73) (cytosol, nucleus, cell membrane, extracellular exosomes) | Cys17, Cys267, Cys574, Cys603 (P11142) |
| Human HspA9 (Grp75, mt-Hsp70) (mitochondria, nucleus) | Cys66, Cys317, Cys366, Cys487, Cys608 (P38646) |
| Human HspA12A (extracellular exosomes, nucleus) | Cys80, Cys246, Cys502, Cys564, Cys621 (O43301) |
| Human HspA12B (endothelial cells, intracellular, blood plasma) | Cys36, Cys106, Cys250, Cys321, Cys365, Cys450, Cys570, Cys595, Cys610, Cys611, Cys626, Cys639 (Q96MM6) |
| Human HspA13 (Stch) (ER, extracellular exosomes, microsomes) | Cys43 (P48723) |
| Human HspA14 (Hsp60, Hsp70L1) (cytosol, membrane) | Cys10, Cys14, Cys89, Cys280, Cys293, Cys304, Cys311, Cys335, Cys394, Cys440, Cys492, Cys500 (Q0VDF9) |
| Human HspH1 (Hsp105, Hsp110) (microtubule, cytosol, extracellular region or secreted, nucleus) | Cys13, Cys34, Cys48, Cys140, Cys167, Cys213, Cys245, Cys270, Cys290, Cys310, Cys376, Cys380, Cys516, Cys650, Cys658, Cys796, Cys845 (Q92598) |
| Human Hyou1 (Grp170, Orp150) (ER, extracellular region or secreted) | Cys15, Cys240, Cys352, Cys805 (Q9Y4L1) |
Figure 2Crystal structures of human HspA1A. The nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) in the ADP-bound state (PDB code 3AY9) and the substrate-binding domain (SBD, PDB code 4PO2) are shown. The dashed line represents the flexible linker between the NBD and SBD. The SBD contains a β-sandwich substrate-binding subdomain (SBDβ) and an α-helical lid subdomain (SBDα). The five Cys residues are labeled in green. Figure reproduced from ref. [52].
Figure 3Glutathionylation of the cysteine residues of Hsp70 family members in HeLa cells with or without diamide treatment detected by mass spectrometry. Figure adapted from ref. [52].
Figure 4The most conserved Cys residue in Hsp70 homologues. The conserved Cys is indicated by the green dashed box. In each line the last number indicates the position of the last residue in the corresponding Hsp70 homologue.