Mechanism of small heat shock protein client sequestration and induced polydispersity
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Small heat shock proteins (sHSPs) act as first responders during cellular stress by recognizing and sequestering destabilized proteins (clients), preventing their aggregation and facilitating downstream refolding or degradation 1–3 . This chaperone function is critically important to proteostasis, conserved across all kingdoms of life, and associated with various protein misfolding diseases in humans 4,5 . Mechanistic insights into how sHSPs sequester destabilized clients have been limited due to the extreme molecular plasticity and client-induced polydispersity of sHSP/client complexes 6–8 . Here, we present high-resolution cryo-EM structures of the sHSP from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii ( mj HSP16.5) in both the apo-state and in an ensemble of client-bound states. The ensemble not only reveals key molecular mechanisms by which sHSPs respond to and sequester client proteins, but also provides insights into the cooperative nature of chaperone-client interactions. Engagement with destabilized client induces a polarization of stability across the mj HSP16.5 scaffold, proposed to facilitate higher-order assembly and enhance client sequestration capacity. Some higher-order sHSP oligomers appear to form through simple insertion of dimeric subunits into new geometrical features, while other higher-order states suggest multiple sHSP/client assembly pathways. Together, these results provide long-sought insights into the chaperone function of sHSPs and highlight the relationship between polydispersity and client sequestration under stress conditions.