Search results for "chaperon"

showing 10 items of 358 documents

Hsp 56 mRNA in Paracentrotus lividus embryos binds to a mitochondrial protein

2007

We previously demonstrated that Paracentrotus lividus Hsp56 mitochondrial chaperonin is constitutively expressed during development, that it has a specific territorial distribution, both in normal and heat-shocked embryos, and that its amount increases after heat shock [Roccheri MC, Patti M, Agnello M, Gianguzza F, Carra E, Rinaldi AM. Localization of mitochondrial Hsp56 chaperonin during sea urchin development. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2001;287:1093-98] and cadmium treatment [Roccheri MC, Agnello M, Boneventura R, Matranga V. Cadmium induces the expression of specific stress proteins in sea urchin embryos. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2004;321:80-7]. In this study, we looked at Hsp56 mRNA …

chaperoninEmbryo NonmammaliancadmiumBiologyMitochondrionheat-shockParacentrotus lividusChaperoninMitochondrial ProteinsTacrolimus Binding Proteinsbiology.animalOrganelleAnimalsRNA MessengerSea urchinMessenger RNANuclease protection assayembryo developmentCell BiologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologymitochondriaGene Expression RegulationParacentrotusBacterial outer membraneHeat-Shock Response
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Hsp60 Protects against Amyloid β Oligomer Synaptic Toxicity via Modification of Toxic Oligomer Conformation

2019

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia worldwide. While the etiology of AD remains uncertain, neurotoxic effects of amyloid beta oligomers (Aβo) on synaptic function, a well-established early event in AD, is an attractive area for the development of novel strategies to modify or cease the disease's progression. In this work, we tested the protective action of the mitochondrial chaperone Hsp60 against Aβo neurotoxicity, by determining the direct effect of Hsp60 in changing Aβo toxic conformations and thus reducing their dysfunctional synaptic binding and consequent suppression of long-term potentiation. Our data suggest that Hsp60 has a direct impact on Aβo, resulting in a…

chaperoninProtein ConformationPhysiologyAmyloid betaCognitive NeuroscienceBiochemistryCell LineMitochondrial ProteinsMice03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineAnimalsHumanssynaptic toxicityCytotoxicity030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesAmyloid-β oligomersynaptic plasticityAmyloid beta-PeptidesbiologyChemistryNeurotoxicityLong-term potentiationChaperonin 60Cell BiologyGeneral MedicineAlzheimer's diseaseHsp60medicine.diseaseCell biologyChaperone (protein)SynapsesToxicitySynaptic plasticitybiology.proteinHSP60030217 neurology & neurosurgeryProtein BindingACS Chemical Neuroscience
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Hsp60 from cancer cells can reach near and distant targets: A proposal for a multistage pathway

2011

Cancer cells have means to influence other cells in their vicinity and distant, and in this signal-delivering mechanisms the chaperonin Hsp60 plays a role, which is currently being recognized as potentially crucial for the growth and dissemination of at least certain types of tumors. In order to arrive at its destination, Hsp60, a typical resident of mitochondria in normal and tumor cells, leaves the organelle and reaches the blood. In the latter, Hsp60 can travel and arrive at targets situated far away from its origin. The details of the route followed by Hsp60 and their molecular mechanisms have not yet been fully elucidated. We investigated Hsp60 levels and secretion in normal and tumor …

chaperonins; cellular secretion; exosomes; lipid rafts; multivesicular bodies; cell membraneHsp60 cancer
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Comparative analysis of the coordinated motion of Hsp70s from different organelles observed by single-molecule three-color FRET.

2021

Cellular function depends on the correct folding of proteins inside the cell. Heat-shock proteins 70 (Hsp70s), being among the first molecular chaperones binding to nascently translated proteins, aid in protein folding and transport. They undergo large, coordinated intra- and interdomain structural rearrangements mediated by allosteric interactions. Here, we applied a three-color single-molecule Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) combined with three-color photon distribution analysis to compare the conformational cycle of the Hsp70 chaperones DnaK, Ssc1, and BiP. By capturing three distances simultaneously, we can identify coordinated structural changes during the functional cycle. Be…

chemistry.chemical_classificationOrganellesMultidisciplinarySaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsAllosteric regulationPeptideSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiological SciencesMitochondrial Membrane Transport ProteinsRecombinant ProteinsSingle Molecule ImagingFolding (chemistry)Förster resonance energy transferchemistryHeat shock proteinBiophysicsEscherichia coliFluorescence Resonance Energy TransferMoleculeProtein foldingNucleotideHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsMolecular ChaperonesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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17β-Estradiol-dependent regulation of chaperone expression and telomerase activity in the marine sponge Geodia cydonium

1999

It is known that species belonging to the lowest metazoan phylum, the Porifera (sponges), do not develop tumors. Sponge cells share with tumor cells of higher animals at least one characteristic; they contain high levels of telomerase activity, suggesting that they possess a high proliferation capacity. This assumption, however, has not been substantiated experimentally. In addition, sponges show a specific bauplan, leading us to postulate that they undergo apoptosis to replace a given set of cells at a given time. In the present study, 17β-estradiol (βE2) was used as a defined agent to assess its effect on both the telomerase activity and the process of apoptosis in the marine sponge Geodi…

chemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesProgrammed cell deathTelomeraseEcologybiologyAquatic ScienceCell biologychemistryBiochemistryApoptosisChaperone (protein)Gene expressionCancer cellbiology.proteinThioredoxinEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Biology
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Distinct amino acids of  the Oenococcus oeni small heat shock protein Lo18 are essential for damaged protein protection and membrane stabilization

2010

The small heat shock protein (smHsp) Lo18 from lactic acid bacteria Oenococcus oeni reduces in vitro thermal aggregation of proteins and modulates the membrane fluidity of native liposomes. An absence of information relating to the way in which the smHsp demonstrates a stabilizing effect for both proteins and membranes prompted this study. We expressed three Lo18 proteins with amino acid substitutions in Escherichia coli to investigate their ability to prevent E. coli protein aggregation and their capacity to stabilize E. coli whole-cell membranes. Our results showed that the alanine 123 to serine substitution induces a decrease in chaperone activity in denaturated proteins, and that the ty…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyProtein aggregationbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyAmino acidBiochemistrychemistryMembrane proteinChaperone (protein)Heat shock proteinGeneticsMembrane fluiditybiology.proteinDenaturation (biochemistry)Molecular BiologyOenococcus oeniFEMS Microbiology Letters
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Evidence for the plant-specific intercellular transport of the Arabidopsis copper chaperone CCH

2001

Summary Arabidopsis copper chaperone (CCH) belongs to a family of eukaryotic proteins that participates in intracellular copper homeostasis by delivering this metal to the secretory pathway. In this work we show that the CCH protein is mainly located along the vascular bundles of senescing leaves and petioles, as shown by tissue prints and immunohistochemical detection. CCH protein also accumulates in stem sieve elements and is collected in phloem exudates. Accordingly, Arabidopsis CCH is the only member of the metallochaperone family described to function intercellularly to date. Moreover, the CCH protein remains stable when plants are subjected to excess copper that causes a rapid and spe…

chemistry.chemical_classificationendocrine systembiologyIntercellular transportCell BiologyPlant ScienceVascular bundlebiology.organism_classificationchemistryBiochemistryChaperone (protein)ArabidopsisGeneticsbiology.proteinMetalloproteinPhloem transportPhloemSecretory pathwayThe Plant Journal
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Higher plants possess two different types of ATX1-like copper chaperones.

2007

Abstract Copper (Cu) chaperones constitute a family of small Cu+-binding proteins required for Cu homeostasis in eukaryotes. The ATX1 family of Cu chaperones specifically delivers Cu to heavy metal P-type ATPases. The plant Arabidopsis thaliana expresses the ATX1-like Cu chaperone CCH, which exhibits a plant-specific carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) with unique structural properties. We show that CCH homologues from other higher plants contain CTDs with structural properties similar to Arabidopsis CCH. Furthermore, we identify a new ATX1-like Cu chaperone in Arabidopsis, AtATX1, which functionally complements yeast atx1Δ and sod1Δ associated phenotypes, and localizes to the cytosol of Arabidop…

endocrine systemATPaseTwo-hybrid screeningBiophysicsArabidopsischemistry.chemical_elementBiochemistryArabidopsisMolecular BiologyAdenosine TriphosphatasesbiologyArabidopsis ProteinsCell BiologyHistone-Lysine N-Methyltransferasebiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeCopperYeastProtein Structure TertiaryCytosolBiochemistrychemistryChaperone (protein)biology.proteinCopperGenome PlantMolecular ChaperonesTranscription FactorsBiochemical and biophysical research communications
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Extracellular heat shock proteins in cancer: From early diagnosis to new therapeutic approach

2021

In cancer, human cells lose the ability to properly control the series of events that occur constantly during cell growth and division, including protein expression, stability, and dynamics. Heat shock proteins (Hsps) are key molecules in these events, constitutively expressed at high levels and could furthermore be induced by the response to cancer-induced stress. In tumor cells, Hsps have been shown to be implicated in the regulation of apoptosis, immune responses, angiogenesis and metastasis; in some cases, they can be overexpressed and dysregulated, representing important cancer hallmarks. In the past few years, it has been demonstrated that Hsps can be released by tumor cells through s…

endocrine systemCancer ResearchAngiogenesisApoptosischemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyMetastasisImmune systemNeoplasmsHeat shock proteinBiomarkers TumorTumor MicroenvironmentmedicineExtracellularHumansHeat-Shock ProteinsEarly Detection of CancerTumor microenvironmentSettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaCell growthCancerextracellular vesicles Heat shock proteins Liquid biopsyMolecular chaperones.Cancerhemic and immune systemsmedicine.diseaseCell biologybiological sciencesSeminars in Cancer Biology
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Functional and conformational properties of the exclusive C-domain from the Arabidopsis copper chaperone (CCH)

2001

The Arabidopsis thaliana copper chaperone (CCH) is a small copper binding protein involved in copper trafficking. When compared to homologues from other eukaryotes, CCH has two different domains; the conserved N-domain and the plant-exclusive C-domain, a C-terminal extension with an unusual amino-acid composition. In order to characterize this extra C-domain, the CCH protein, the N-domain and the C-domain were all expressed separately in heterologous systems. While the N-domain retained the copper chaperone and antioxidant properties described for the yeast Atx1 and human HAH1 counterparts, the C-domain displayed particular structural properties that would be necessary to optimize copper ho…

endocrine systemMetallochaperone; Extended structure; Protein domainProtein domain:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Bioquímica [UNESCO]MetallochaperoneUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::BioquímicaCell BiologyMolecular BiologyBiochemistryExtended structure
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