AI Article Synopsis

  • αB-crystallin, originally seen as a lens protein, plays vital roles in various cellular processes through phosphorylation at specific serine residues, which influences its structure and function.
  • The review discusses how phosphorylation affects αB-crystallin's oligomeric stability and chaperone activity, as well as its roles in cell death, differentiation, and diseases linked to aging and stress.
  • While low phosphorylation levels provide protective effects, excessive phosphorylation can be harmful, especially in certain mutations associated with myopathies that lead to aggregation.

Article Abstract

Background: αB-crystallin, once thought to be a lenticular protein, is ubiquitous and has critical roles in several cellular processes that are modulated by phosphorylation. Serine residues 19, 45 and 59 of αB-crystallin undergo phosphorylation. Phosphorylation of S45 is mediated by p44/42 MAP kinase, whereas S59 phosphorylation is mediated by MAPKAP kinase-2. Pathway involved in S19 phosphorylation is not known.

Scope Of Review: The review highlights the role of phosphorylation in (i) oligomeric structure, stability and chaperone activity, (ii) cellular processes such as apoptosis, myogenic differentiation, cell cycle regulation and angiogenesis, and (iii) aging, stress, cardiomyopathy-causing αB-crystallin mutants, and in other diseases.

Major Conclusions: Depending on the context and extent of phosphorylation, αB-crystallin seems to confer beneficial or deleterious effects. Phosphorylation alters structure, stability, size distribution and dynamics of the oligomeric assembly, thus modulating chaperone activity and various cellular processes. Phosphorylated αB-crystallin has a tendency to partition to the cytoskeleton and hence to the insoluble fraction. Low levels of phosphorylation appear to be protective, while hyperphosphorylation has negative implications. Mutations in αB-crystallin, such as R120G, Q151X and 464delCT, associated with inherited myofibrillar myopathy lead to hyperphosphorylation and intracellular inclusions. An ongoing study in our laboratory with phosphorylation-mimicking mutants indicates that phosphorylation of R120GαB-crystallin increases its propensity to aggregate.

General Significance: Phosphorylation of αB-crystallin has dual role that manifests either beneficial or deleterious consequences depending on the extent of phosphorylation and interaction with cytoskeleton. Considering that disease-causing mutants of αB-crystallin are hyperphosphorylated, moderation of phosphorylation may be a useful strategy in disease management. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Crystallin Biochemistry in Health and Disease.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbagen.2015.09.017DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

phosphorylation
14
phosphorylation αb-crystallin
12
cellular processes
12
αb-crystallin
8
structure stability
8
chaperone activity
8
activity cellular
8
extent phosphorylation
8
beneficial deleterious
8
αb-crystallin role
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!