There are many different families of chaperones; each family acts to aid protein folding in a different way. In bacteria like
E. coli, many of these proteins are highly expressed under conditions of high stress, for example, when the bacterium is placed in high temperatures, thus heat shock protein chaperones are the most extensive. A variety of nomenclatures are in use for chaperones. As heat shock proteins, the names are classically formed by "Hsp" followed by the approximate molecular mass in
kilodaltons; such names are commonly used for eukaryotes such as yeast. The bacterial names have more varied forms, and refer directly to their apparent function at discovery. For example, "GroEL" originally stands for "phage growth defect, overcome by mutation in phage gene E, large subunit".
Hsp10 and Hsp60 Hsp10/60 (GroEL/GroES complex in
E. coli) is the best characterized large (~ 1 MDa) chaperone complex.
GroEL (Hsp60) is a double-ring 14mer with a
hydrophobic patch at its opening; it is so large it can accommodate native folding of 54-kDa
GFP in its lumen.
GroES (Hsp10) is a single-ring heptamer that binds to GroEL in the presence of ATP or ADP. GroEL/GroES may not be able to undo previous aggregation, but it does compete in the pathway of misfolding and aggregation. Also acts in the
mitochondrial matrix as a molecular chaperone.
Hsp70 and Hsp40 Hsp70 (DnaK in
E. coli) is perhaps the best characterized small (~ 70 kDa) chaperone. The
Hsp70 proteins are aided by Hsp40 proteins (DnaJ in
E. coli), which increase the ATP consumption rate and activity of the Hsp70s. The two proteins are named "Dna" in bacteria because they were initially identified as being required for
E. coli DNA replication. It has been noted that increased expression of Hsp70 proteins in the cell results in a decreased tendency toward
apoptosis. Although a precise mechanistic understanding has yet to be determined, it is known that Hsp70s have a high-affinity bound state to unfolded proteins when bound to
ADP, and a low-affinity state when bound to
ATP. It is thought that many Hsp70s crowd around an unfolded substrate, stabilizing it and preventing aggregation until the unfolded molecule folds properly, at which time the Hsp70s lose affinity for the molecule and diffuse away. Hsp70 also acts as a mitochondrial and chloroplastic molecular chaperone in eukaryotes.
Hsp90 Hsp90 (HtpG in
E. coli) may be the least understood chaperone. Its molecular weight is about 90 kDa, and it is necessary for viability in eukaryotes (possibly for prokaryotes as well). Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) is a molecular chaperone essential for activating many signaling proteins in the eukaryotic cell. Each Hsp90 has an ATP-binding domain, a middle
domain, and a
dimerization domain. Originally thought to clamp onto their substrate protein (also known as a client protein) upon binding ATP, the recently published structures by Vaughan
et al. and Ali
et al. indicate that client proteins may bind externally to both the N-terminal and middle domains of Hsp90. Hsp90 may also require
co-chaperones-like
immunophilins,
Sti1, p50 (
Cdc37), and
Aha1, and also cooperates with the Hsp70 chaperone system.
Hsp100 Hsp100 (Clp family in
E. coli) proteins have been studied
in vivo and
in vitro for their ability to target and unfold tagged and misfolded proteins. Proteins in the Hsp100/Clp family form large
hexameric structures with unfoldase activity in the presence of ATP. These proteins are thought to function as chaperones by processively threading client proteins through a small 20 Å (2
nm) pore, thereby giving each client protein a second chance to fold. Some of these Hsp100 chaperones, like ClpA and ClpX, associate with the double-ringed
tetradecameric serine protease ClpP; instead of catalyzing the refolding of client proteins, these complexes are responsible for the targeted destruction of tagged and misfolded proteins.
Hsp104, the Hsp100 of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is essential for the propagation of many
yeast prions. Deletion of the HSP104 gene results in cells that are unable to propagate certain
prions. ==Bacteriophage==