The molecular chaperone alpha-crystallin inhibits UV-induced protein aggregation

被引:61
|
作者
Borkman, RF
Knight, G
Obi, B
机构
[1] School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta
[2] School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta
关键词
lens; protein; aggregation; alpha-crystallin; gamma-crystallin; chaperone; UV; opacity; turbidity;
D O I
10.1006/exer.1996.0018
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
Solutions of gamma-crystallin, and various enzymes, at neutral pH and 24-26 degrees C, became turbid upon exposure to UV radiation at 295 or 308 nm, SDS-PAGE analysis revealed interchain cross-linking and aggregate formation compared to dark control solutions as reported previously. When alpha-crystallin was added to the protein solutions in stoichiometric amounts, UV irradiation resulted in significantly less turbidity than in the absence of alpha-crystallin. For example, addition of 0.5 mg of alpha-crystallin to 0.5 mg of gamma-crystallin in 1.0 ml solution yielded only 25% of the turbidity seen in the absence of alpha-crystallin. Addition of 2.0 mg of alpha-crystallin resulted in 20% of the turbidity. Given the molecular weights of alpha- and gamma-crystallin (about 800 kDa and 20 kDa, respectively), a gamma/alpha 1:1 weight ratio corresponds to a 40:1 molar ratio, and a gamma/alpha 1:4 weight ratio corresponds to a 10:1 molar ratio. Hence, the molar ratio of alpha-crystallin needed to effectively protect gamma-crystallin from photochemical opacification was gamma/alpha = n:1, where n was in the range 10-40. In terms of subunits, this ratio is gamma/alpha = 1:m, where m = 1-4. Thus, each gamma-crystallin molecule needs 1-4 alpha subunits for protection. Similar stoichiometries were observed for protection of the other proteins studied. The protection stems in part from screening of UV radiation by alpha-crystallin but more importantly from a chaperone effect analogous to that seen in thermal aggregation experiments.
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页码:141 / 148
页数:8
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