[PDF][PDF] Polyphosphate is a primordial chaperone

MJ Gray, WY Wholey, NO Wagner, CM Cremers… - Molecular cell, 2014 - cell.com
MJ Gray, WY Wholey, NO Wagner, CM Cremers, A Mueller-Schickert, NT Hock, AG Krieger…
Molecular cell, 2014cell.com
Composed of up to 1,000 phospho-anhydride bond-linked phosphate monomers, inorganic
polyphosphate (polyP) is one of the most ancient, conserved, and enigmatic molecules in
biology. Here we demonstrate that polyP functions as a hitherto unrecognized chaperone.
We show that polyP stabilizes proteins in vivo, diminishes the need for other chaperone
systems to survive proteotoxic stress conditions, and protects a wide variety of proteins
against stress-induced unfolding and aggregation. In vitro studies reveal that polyP has …
Summary
Composed of up to 1,000 phospho-anhydride bond-linked phosphate monomers, inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) is one of the most ancient, conserved, and enigmatic molecules in biology. Here we demonstrate that polyP functions as a hitherto unrecognized chaperone. We show that polyP stabilizes proteins in vivo, diminishes the need for other chaperone systems to survive proteotoxic stress conditions, and protects a wide variety of proteins against stress-induced unfolding and aggregation. In vitro studies reveal that polyP has protein-like chaperone qualities, binds to unfolding proteins with high affinity in an ATP-independent manner, and supports their productive refolding once nonstress conditions are restored. Our results uncover a universally important function for polyP and suggest that these long chains of inorganic phosphate may have served as one of nature's first chaperones, a role that continues to the present day.
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