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Title: A client-binding site of Cdc37. Author: Terasawa K, Minami Y. Journal: FEBS J; 2005 Sep; 272(18):4684-90. PubMed ID: 16156789. Abstract: The molecular chaperone Hsp90 is distinct from Hsp70 and chaperonin in that client proteins are apparently restricted to a subset of proteins categorized as cellular signaling molecules. Among these, many specific protein kinases require the assistance of Hsp90 and its co-chaperone Cdc37/p50 for their biogenesis. A series of Cdc37 deletion mutants revealed that all mutants capable of binding Raf-1 possess amino acid residues between 181 and 200. The 20-residue region is sufficient and, in particular, a five-residue segment (residue 191-195) is essential for binding to Raf-1. These five residues are present in one alpha helix (residues 184-199) in the middle of Cdc37, which is unexpectedly nested within the Hsp90-interacting domain of Cdc37, which was recently determined by crystallography, but does not seem to contribute to direct contact with Hsp90. Furthermore, an N-terminally truncated mutant of Cdc37 composed of residues 181-378 was shown to bind the N-terminal portion of Raf-1 (subdomains I-IV). This mutant can bind not only other Hsp90 client protein kinases, Akt1, Aurora B and Cdk4, but also Cdc2 and Cdk2, which to date have not been shown to physically interact with Cdc37. These results suggest that a region of Cdc37 other than the client-binding site may be responsible for discriminating client protein kinases from others.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]