Nature structural & molecular biology | 2019

The structure and oxidation of the eye lens chaperone αA-crystallin

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The small heat shock protein αA-crystallin is a molecular chaperone important for the optical properties of the vertebrate eye lens. It forms heterogeneous oligomeric ensembles. We determined the structures of human αA-crystallin oligomers by combining cryo-electron microscopy, cross-linking/mass spectrometry, NMR spectroscopy and molecular modeling. The different oligomers can be interconverted by the addition or subtraction of tetramers, leading to mainly 12-, 16- and 20-meric assemblies in which interactions between N-terminal regions are important. Cross-dimer domain-swapping of the C-terminal region is a determinant of αA-crystallin heterogeneity. Human αA-crystallin contains two cysteines, which can form an intramolecular disulfide in vivo. Oxidation in vitro requires conformational changes and oligomer dissociation. The oxidized oligomers, which are larger than reduced αA-crystallin and destabilized against unfolding, are active chaperones and can transfer the disulfide to destabilized substrate proteins. The insight into the structure and function of αA-crystallin provides a basis for understanding its role in the eye lens.Oligomers of human αA-crystallin are characterized structurally via a hybrid approach, combining cryo-EM, cross-linking/mass spectrometry, NMR and modeling, providing insight into their dynamic behavior and heterogeneity and revealing that oxidized oligomers can also act as chaperones.

Volume 26
Pages 1141 - 1150
DOI 10.1038/s41594-019-0332-9
Language English
Journal Nature structural & molecular biology

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