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Clusterin is an extracellular chaperone that specifically interacts with slowly aggregating proteins on their off‐folding pathway
Author(s) -
Poon Stephen,
Treweek Teresa M,
Wilson Mark R,
Easterbrook-Smith Simon B,
Carver John A
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
febs letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.593
H-Index - 257
eISSN - 1873-3468
pISSN - 0014-5793
DOI - 10.1016/s0014-5793(02)02326-8
Subject(s) - clusterin , chaperone (clinical) , lysozyme , chemistry , protein folding , circular dichroism , biophysics , folding (dsp implementation) , biochemistry , extracellular , protein secondary structure , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , medicine , apoptosis , pathology , electrical engineering , engineering
Clusterin is an extracellular mammalian chaperone protein which inhibits stress‐induced precipitation of many different proteins. The conformational state(s) of proteins that interact with clusterin and the stage(s) along the folding and off‐folding (precipitation‐bound) pathways where this interaction occurs were previously unknown. We investigated this by examining the interactions of clusterin with different structural forms of α‐lactalbumin, γ‐crystallin and lysozyme. When assessed by ELISA and native gel electrophoresis, clusterin did not bind to various stable, intermediately folded states of α‐lactalbumin nor to the native form of this protein, but did bind to and inhibit the slow precipitation of reduced α‐lactalbumin. Reduction‐induced changes in the conformation of α‐lactalbumin, in the absence and presence of clusterin, were monitored by real‐time 1 H NMR spectroscopy. In the absence of clusterin, an intermediately folded form of α‐lactalbumin, with some secondary structure but lacking tertiary structure, aggregated and precipitated. In the presence of clusterin, this form of α‐lactalbumin was stabilised in a non‐aggregated state, possibly via transient interactions with clusterin prior to complexation. Additional experiments demonstrated that clusterin potently inhibited the slow precipitation, but did not inhibit the rapid precipitation, of lysozyme and γ‐crystallin induced by different stresses. These results suggest that clusterin interacts with and stabilises slowly aggregating proteins but is unable to stabilise rapidly aggregating proteins. Collectively, our results suggest that during its chaperone action, clusterin preferentially recognises partly folded protein intermediates that are slowly aggregating whilst venturing along their irreversible off‐folding pathway towards a precipitated protein.

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