Litcius/Paper detail

α-Crystallins in the Vertebrate Eye Lens: Complex Oligomers and Molecular Chaperones

Marc A. Sprague‐Piercy, Megan A. Rocha, Ashley O. Kwok, Rachel W. Martin

2020Annual Review of Physical Chemistry66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

α-Crystallins are small heat-shock proteins that act as holdase chaperones. In humans, αA-crystallin is expressed only in the eye lens, while αB-crystallin is found in many tissues. α-Crystallins have a central domain flanked by flexible extensions and form dynamic, heterogeneous oligomers. Structural models show that both the C- and N-terminal extensions are important for controlling oligomerization through domain swapping. α-Crystallin prevents aggregation of damaged β- and γ-crystallins by binding to the client protein using a variety of binding modes. α-Crystallin chaperone activity can be compromised by mutation or posttranslational modifications, leading to protein aggregation and cataract. Because of their high solubility and their ability to form large, functional oligomers, α-crystallins are particularly amenable to structure determination by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and solution NMR, as well as cryo-electron microscopy.

Topics & Concepts

CrystallinEye lensHeat shock proteinChaperone (clinical)BiophysicsLens (geology)ChemistryBiologyBiochemistryMedicineGenePaleontologyPathologyConnexins and lens biologyHeat shock proteins researchYersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites research