Plant Physiol, February 2002, Vol. 128, pp. 661-668
Functional Regions of Rice Heat Shock Protein, Oshsp16.9,
Required for Conferring Thermotolerance in Escherichia
coli1
Ching-Hui
Yeh,
Yih-Ming
Chen, and
Chu-Yung
Lin*
Department of Botany, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan,
Republic of China
Rice (Oryza sativa) class I low-molecular mass (LMM)
heat shock protein (HSP), Oshsp16.9, has been shown to be able to
confer thermotolerance in Escherichia coli. To define
the regions for this intriguing property, deletion mutants of this hsp
have been constructed and overexpressed in E. coli
XL1-blue cells after isopropyl
-D-thioglactopyranoside
induction. The deletion of amino acid residues 30 through 36 (PATSDND)
in the N-terminal domain or 73 through 78 (EEGNVL) in the consensus II
domain of Oshsp16.9 led to the loss of chaperone activities and also
rendered the E. coli incapable of surviving at 47.5°C.
To further investigate the function of these two domains, we determined
the light scattering changes of Oshsp16.9 mutant proteins at 320 nm
under heat treatment either by themselves or in the presence of a
thermosensitive enzyme, citrate synthase. It was observed that regions
of amino acid residues 30 through 36 and 73 through 78 were responsible
for stability of Oshsp16.9 and its interactions with other unfolded
protein substrates, such as citrate synthase. Studies of two-point
mutants of Oshsp16.9, GST-N74E73K and GST-N74E74K, indicate that amino acid residues 73 and 74 are an important part of the substrate-binding site of Oshsp16.9. Non-denaturing gel analysis of purified Oshsp16.9 revealed that oligomerization of Oshsp16.9 was necessary but not sufficient for its chaperone activity.
1
This work was supported by the National Science
Council, Republic of China (grant nos. NSC87-2311-B002-009-B01 and
NSC89-2311-B002-016-B30 to C.-Y.L.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail chuyung{at}ccms.ntu.edu.tw; fax
886-2-2363-8598.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists