An essential nonredundant role for mycobacterial DnaK in native protein folding. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Protein chaperones are essential in all domains of life to prevent and resolve protein misfolding during translation and proteotoxic stress. HSP70 family chaperones, including E. coli DnaK, function in stress induced protein refolding and degradation, but are dispensable for cellular viability due to redundant chaperone systems that prevent global nascent peptide insolubility. However, the function of HSP70 chaperones in mycobacteria, a genus that includes multiple human pathogens, has not been examined. We find that mycobacterial DnaK is essential for cell growth and required for native protein folding in Mycobacterium smegmatis. Loss of DnaK is accompanied by proteotoxic collapse characterized by the accumulation of insoluble newly synthesized proteins. DnaK is required for solubility of large multimodular lipid synthases, including the essential lipid synthase FASI, and DnaK loss is accompanied by disruption of membrane structure and increased cell permeability. Trigger Factor is nonessential and has a minor role in native protein folding that is only evident in the absence of DnaK. In unstressed cells, DnaK localizes to multiple, dynamic foci, but relocalizes to focal protein aggregates during stationary phase or upon expression of aggregating peptides. Mycobacterial cells restart cell growth after proteotoxic stress by isolating persistent DnaK containing protein aggregates away from daughter cells. These results reveal unanticipated essential nonredunant roles for mycobacterial DnaK in mycobacteria and indicate that DnaK defines a unique susceptibility point in the mycobacterial proteostasis network.

publication date

  • July 24, 2014

Research

keywords

  • Bacterial Proteins
  • Cell Survival
  • HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins
  • Molecular Chaperones
  • Mycobacterium smegmatis

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC4109909

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84905455418

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004516

PubMed ID

  • 25058675

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 10

issue

  • 7