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Small Heat Shock Proteins: Protein Aggregation Amelioration and Neuro- and Age-Protective Roles

Tahani H. Albinhassan, Bothina Mohammed Alharbi, Entissar S. AlSuhaibani, Sameer Mohammad, Shuja Shafi Malik

2025International Journal of Molecular Sciences11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Protein misfolding, aggregation, and aberrant aggregate accumulation play a central role in neurodegenerative disease progression. The proteotoxic factors also govern the aging process to a large extent. Molecular chaperones modulate proteostasis and thereby impact aberrant-protein-induced proteotoxicity. These chaperones have a diverse functional spectrum, including nascent protein folding, misfolded protein sequestration, refolding, or degradation. Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) possess an ATP-independent chaperone-like activity that prevents protein aggregation by keeping target proteins in a folding-competent state to be refolded by ATP-dependent chaperones. Due to their near-universal upregulation and presence in sites of proteotoxic stress like diseased brains, sHsps were considered pathological. However, gene knockdown and overexpression studies have established their protective functions. This review provides an updated overview of the sHsp role in protein aggregation amelioration and highlights evidence for sHsp modulation of neurodegenerative disease-related protein aggregation and aging.

Topics & Concepts

ProteostasisProteotoxicityProtein aggregationProtein foldingHeat shock proteinChaperone (clinical)AggresomeCell biologyHSF1BiologyCLPBChemical chaperoneUnfolded protein responseChemistryHsp70BiochemistryUbiquitinGeneEndoplasmic reticulumMedicinePathologyHeat shock proteins researchEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseEnzyme Structure and Function
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