DnaJB1 chaperone inhibits tau aggregation by recognizing its N-terminus

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Abstract

A network of protein folding and degradation machineries maintains protein homeostasis by preventing the accumulation of misfolded proteins and by facilitating their clearance. These systems are also crucial for the inhibition of protein aggregation in neurodegenerative diseases where misfolded proteins often aggregate into β-rich amyloid fibrils. How these machineries selectively recognize pathological aggregates over normal conformations remains unclear. Here, we present the molecular logic for how a Hsp70 co-chaperone from the J-domain protein family, DnaJB1, binds pathological aggregates of the microtubule-associated protein tau through the recognition of the flexible N-terminus that comprises the disordered fuzzy coat of fibrils. We show that this interaction contributes to the regulation of tau assembly in cellular models of tau aggregation and depends on the presence of the negatively charged residues. We determined that DnaJB1 inhibits tau aggregation in vitro through these interactions, and found that this weak, transient binding can be enhanced by the presence of polyanionic factors such as heparin. As prospective client-binding sites, we identified the charged hinge between the two β-sandwich C-terminal domains I and II, as well as the conserved J-domain of this chaperone. This work presents novel biochemical and structural insights into how the molecular chaperone DnaJB1 recognizes full-length forms of tau protein in a pathological context.

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