Thakur, Anushikha ; Chitoor, Balasubramanyam ; Goswami, Arvind V. ; Pareek, Gautam ; Atreya, Hanudatta S. ; D'Silva, Patrick (2012) Structure and mechanistic insights into novel iron-mediated moonlighting functions of human J-protein cochaperone, Dph4 Journal of Biological Chemistry, 287 (16). pp. 13194-13205. ISSN 0021-9258
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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.339655
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.339655
Abstract
J-proteins are obligate cochaperones of Hsp70s and stimulate their ATPase activity via the J-domain. Although the functions of J-proteins have been well understood in the context of Hsp70s, their additional co-evolved “physiological functions” are still elusive. We report here the solution structure and mechanism of novel iron-mediated functional roles of human Dph4, a type III J-protein playing a vital role in diphthamide biosynthesis and normal development. The NMR structure of Dph4 reveals two domains: a conserved J-domain and a CSL-domain connected via a flexible linker-helix. The linker-helix modulates the conformational flexibility between the two domains, regulating thereby the protein function. Dph4 exhibits a unique ability to bind iron in tetrahedral coordination geometry through cysteines of its CSL-domain. The oxidized Fe-Dph4 shows characteristic UV-visible and electron paramagnetic resonance spectral properties similar to rubredoxins. Iron-bound Dph4 (Fe-Dph4) also undergoes oligomerization, thus potentially functioning as a transient “iron storage protein,” thereby regulating the intracellular iron homeostasis. Remarkably, Fe-Dph4 exhibits vital redox and electron carrier activity, which is critical for important metabolic reactions, including diphthamide biosynthesis. Further, we observed that Fe-Dph4 is conformationally better poised to perform Hsp70-dependent functions, thus underlining the significance of iron binding in Dph4. Yeast Jjj3, a functional ortholog of human Dph4 also shows a similar iron-binding property, indicating the conserved nature of iron sequestration across species. Taken together, our findings provide invaluable evidence in favor of additional co-evolved specialized functions of J-proteins, previously not well appreciated.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. |
Keywords: | Heat Shock Protein; Molecular Chaperone; NMR; Protein Folding; Protein Synthesis; Diphthamide; Hsp70; J-protein; Iron Binding; Protein Metal-Ion Interaction |
ID Code: | 137014 |
Deposited On: | 10 Sep 2025 12:19 |
Last Modified: | 10 Sep 2025 12:19 |
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