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Co-chaperones TIMP2 and AHA1 Competitively Regulate Extracellular HSP90:Client MMP2 Activity and Matrix Proteolysis
Author(s) -
Alexander J. Baker-Williams,
Fiza Hashmi,
Marek A. Budzyński,
Mark R. Woodford,
Stephanie Gleicher,
Samu V. Himanen,
Alan M. Makedon,
Derek Friedman,
Stephanie Cortes,
Sara Namek,
William G. StetlerStevenson,
Gennady Bratslavsky,
Alaji Bah,
Mehdi Mollapour,
Lea Sistonen,
Dimitra Bourboulia
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.07.045
Subject(s) - proteolysis , chemistry , hsp90 , extracellular matrix , microbiology and biotechnology , matrix metalloproteinase , biochemistry , extracellular , biology , enzyme , heat shock protein , gene
The extracellular molecular chaperone heat shock protein 90 (eHSP90) stabilizes protease client the matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2), leading to tumor cell invasion. Although co-chaperones are critical modulators of intracellular HSP90:client function, how the eHSP90:MMP2 complex is regulated remains speculative. Here, we report that the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 (TIMP2) is a stress-inducible extracellular co-chaperone that binds to eHSP90, increases eHSP90 binding to ATP, and inhibits its ATPase activity. In addition to disrupting the eHSP90:MMP2 complex and terminally inactivating MMP2, TIMP2 loads the client to eHSP90, keeping the protease in a transient inhibitory state. Secreted activating co-chaperone AHA1 displaces TIMP2 from the complex, providing a "reactivating" mechanism for MMP2. Gene knockout or blocking antibodies targeting TIMP2 and AHA1 released by HT1080 cancer cells modify their gelatinolytic activity. Our data suggest that TIMP2 and AHA1 co-chaperones function as a molecular switch that determines the inhibition and reactivation of the eHSP90 client protein MMP2.

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