HSPB8 is a heat shock protein belonging to a family of ATP-independent stress proteins called HSPB which are present far and wide in the cells of various organisms. They are committed to protein quality control (PQC) and strive to avert protein aggregation and to procreate a pool of non-native proteins that can be swiftly folded. Their fundamental expression or stress inducibility is regulated by various cis-elements localized in the HSPB regulatory regions. In the current study we have predicted and confirmed two alternatively spliced novel transcripts of HSPB8 gene in liver, brain, and heart. These spliced variants have smaller sizes owing to smaller N terminal regions and showed remarkable changes in their cellular localization. Novel isoform (HSPB8-N1) was predicted to be majorly localized to nuclear region while the reported isoform (HSPB8) and one of the novel isoforms (HSPB8-N2) were predicted to be cytoplasmic in nature. There were many changes observed in the phosphorylation sites of the novel isoforms as well. The newly reported isoforms lack several structural motifs that are essential for various functional endeavors of the HSPB8 protein. In silico analysis of the conceptually translated protein was carried out using various bioinformatics tools to gain an understanding of their properties in order to explore their possible potential in therapeutics.
Keywords: Alternative Splicing; HSPB8; Isoforms; Protein Characterization; Small heat Shock Protein.
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.