The Hsp90 Chaperone: 1H and 19F Dynamic Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Reveals a Perfect Enzyme

2019 
Hsp90 is a crucial chaperone whose ATPase activity is fundamental for stabilizing and activating a diverse array of client proteins. Binding and hydrolysis of ATP by dimeric Hsp90 drives a conformational cycle characterized by fluctuations between a compact, N- and C-terminally dimerized catalytically competent closed state, and less compact open state which is largely C-terminally dimerized. We used 19F and 1H dynamic NMR spectroscopy to study the opening and closing kinetics of Hsp90, and to determine the kcat for ATP hydrolysis. We derived a set of coupled ordinary differential equations describing the rate laws for the Hsp90 kinetic cycle, and used these to analyze the NMR data. We find that the kinetics of closing and opening for the chaperone are slow, and that the lower limit for kcat of ATP hydrolysis is ~1 s–1. Our results show that the chemical step is optimized, and that Hsp90 is indeed, a “perfect” enzyme.
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