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1.
There is increasing evidence that soluble oligomers of misfolded protein may play a role in the pathogenesis of protein misfolding diseases including the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) where the protein involved is the prion protein, PrP. The effect of oxidation on fibrillation tendency and neurotoxicity of different molecular variants of the prion peptide PrP106-126 was investigated. It was found that methionine oxidation significantly reduced amyloid fibril formation and proteinase K resistance, but it did not reduce (but rather increase slightly) the neurotoxicity of the peptides in vivo (electroretinography after intraocular injections in mice) and in vitro (in primary neuronal cultures). We furthermore found that the bovine variant of PrP106-126, containing only one methionine residue, showed both reduced fibril forming capacity and in vivo and in vitro neurotoxicity. The findings imply (I) that there is not a simple relation between the formation of amyloid fibrils and neurotoxicity of PrP106-126 derived peptides, (II) that putative, soluble, non-amyloid protofibrils, presumed to be present in increased proportions in oxidized PrP106-126, could play a role in the pathogenesis of TSE and III) that the number of methionine residues in the PrP106-126 peptide seems to have a pivotal role in determining the physical and biological properties of PrP106-126.  相似文献   

2.
Miura T  Yoda M  Takaku N  Hirose T  Takeuchi H 《Biochemistry》2007,46(41):11589-11597
The conformational conversion of prion protein (PrP) from an alpha-helix-rich normal cellular isoform (PrPC) to a beta-sheet-rich pathogenic isoform (PrPSc) is a key event in the development of prion diseases, and it takes place in caveolae, cavelike invaginations of the plasma membrane. A peptide homologous to residues 106-126 of human PrP (PrP106-126) is known to share several properties with PrPSc, e.g., the capability to form a beta-sheet and toxicity against PrPC-expressing cells. PrP106-126 is thus expected to represent a segment of PrP that is involved in the formation of PrPSc. We have examined the effect of lipid membranes containing negatively charged ganglioside, an important component of caveolae, on the secondary structure of PrP106-126 by circular dichroism. The peptide forms an alpha-helical or a beta-sheet structure on the ganglioside-containing membranes. The beta-sheet content increases with an increase of the peptide:lipid ratio, indicating that the beta-sheet formation is linked with self-association of the positively charged peptide on the negatively charged membrane surface. Analogous beta-sheet formation is also induced by membranes composed of negatively charged and neutral glycerophospholipids with high and low melting temperatures, respectively, in which lateral phase separation and clustering of negatively charged lipids occur as shown by Raman spectroscopy. Since ganglioside-containing membranes also exhibit lateral phase separation, clustered negative charges are concluded to be responsible for the beta-sheet formation of PrP106-126. In caveolae, clustered ganglioside molecules are likely to interact with the residue 106-126 region of PrPC to promote the PrPC-to-PrPSc conversion.  相似文献   

3.
Amyloid fibrils are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s and prion diseases. In both pathologies fibrils are found associated to glycosaminoglycans, modulators of the aggregation process. Amyloid peptides and proteins with very poor sequence homologies originate very similar aggregates. This implies the possible existence of a common formation mechanism. A homologous structural motif has recently been described for the Alzheimer’s peptide Aβ(1-28) and the prion protein fragment PrP(185-208). We have studied the influence histidine residues and heparin on the aggregation process of both peptides and determined the possible amyloid characteristics of PrP(185-208), still unknown. The results show that PrP(185-208) forms amyloid aggregates in the presence of heparin. Histidines influence the aggregation kinetics, as in Aβ(1-28), although to a lesser extent. Other spectroscopic properties of the PrP(185-208) fragment are shown to be equivalent to those of other amyloid peptides and PrP(185-208) is shown to be cytotoxic using a neuroblastoma cell line.  相似文献   

4.
Conformational transitions are thought to be the prime mechanism of amyloid formation in prion diseases. The prion proteins are known to exhibit polymorphic behavior that explains their ability of "conformation switching" facilitated by structured "seeds" consisting of transformed proteins. Oligopeptides containing prion sequences showing the polymorphism are not known even though amyloid formation is observed in these fragments. In this work, we have observed polymorphism in a 15-residue peptide PrP (113-127) that is known to form amyloid fibrils on aging. To see the polymorphic behavior of this peptide in different solvent environments, circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopic studies on an aqueous solution of PrP (113-127) in different trifluoroethanol (TFE) concentrations were carried out. The results show that PrP (113-127) have sheet preference in lower TFE concentration whereas it has more helical conformation in higher TFE content (>40%). The structural transitions involved in TFE solvent were studied using interval-scan CD and FT-IR studies. It is interesting to note that the alpha-helical structure persists throughout the structural transition process involved in amyloid fibril formation implicating the involvement of both N- and C-terminal sequences. To unravel the role of the N-terminal region in the polymorphism of the PrP (113-127), CD studies on another synthetic peptide, PrP (113-120) were carried out. PrP(113-120) exhibits random coil conformation in 100% water and helical conformation in 100% TFE, indicating the importance of full-length sequence for beta-sheet formation. Besides, the influence of different chemico-physical conditions such as concentration, pH, ionic strength, and membrane like environment on the secondary structure of the peptide PrP (113-127) has been investigated. At higher concentration, PrP (113-127) shows features of sheet conformation even in 100% TFE suggesting aggregation. In the presence of 5% solution of sodium dodecyl sulfate, PrP (113-127) takes high alpha-helical propensity. The environment-dependent conformational polymorphism of PrP (113-127) and its marked tendency to form stable beta-sheet structure at acidic pH could account for its conformation switching behavior from alpha-helix to beta-sheet. This work emphasizes the coordinative involvement of N-terminal and C-terminal sequences in the self-assembly of PrP (113-127).  相似文献   

5.
Transmissible spongiform encephalitis (TSE) is a lethal illness with no known treatment. Conversion of the cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into the infectious isoform (PrP(Sc)) is believed to be the central event in the development of this disease. Recombinant PrP (rPrP) protein folded into the amyloid conformation was shown to cause the transmissible form of prion disease in transgenic mice and can be used as a surrogate model for PrP(Sc). Here, we introduced a semiautomated assay of in vitro conversion of rPrP protein to the amyloid conformation. We have examined the effect of known inhibitors of prion propagation on this conversion and found good correlation between their activity in this assay and that in other in vitro assays. We thus propose that the conversion of rPrP to the amyloid isoform can serve as a high-throughput screen for possible inhibitors of PrP(Sc) formation and potential anti-TSE drugs.  相似文献   

6.
Gerstmann-Str?ussler-Scheinker disease (GSS) is a cerebral amyloidosis associated with mutations in the prion protein (PrP) gene (PRNP). The aim of this study was to characterize amyloid peptides purified from brain tissue of a patient with the A117V mutation who was Met/Val heterozygous at codon 129, Val(129) being in coupling phase with mutant Val117. The major peptide extracted from amyloid fibrils was a approximately 7-kDa PrP fragment. Sequence analysis and mass spectrometry showed that this fragment had ragged N and C termini, starting mainly at Gly88 and Gly90 and ending with Arg148, Glu152, or Asn153. Only Val was present at positions 117 and 129, indicating that the amyloid protein originated from mutant PrP molecules. In addition to the approximately 7-kDa peptides, the amyloid fraction contained N- and C-terminal PrP fragments corresponding to residues 23-41, 191-205, and 217-228. Fibrillogenesis in vitro with synthetic peptides corresponding to PrP fragments extracted from brain tissue showed that peptide PrP-(85-148) readily assembled into amyloid fibrils. Peptide PrP-(191-205) also formed fibrillary structures although with different morphology, whereas peptides PrP-(23-41) and PrP-(217-228) did not. These findings suggest that the processing of mutant PrP isoforms associated with Gerstmann-Str?ussler-Scheinker disease may occur extracellularly. It is conceivable that full-length PrP and/or large PrP peptides are deposited in the extracellular compartment, partially degraded by proteases and further digested by tissue endopeptidases, originating a approximately 7-kDa protease-resistant core that is similar in patients with different mutations. Furthermore, the present data suggest that C-terminal fragments of PrP may participate in amyloid formation.  相似文献   

7.
As limited structural information is available on prion protein (PrP) misfolding and aggregation, a causative link between the specific (supra)molecular structure of PrP and transmissible spongiform encephalopathies remains to be elucidated. In this study, high pressure was utilized, as an approach to perturb protein structure, to characterize different morphological and structural PrP aggregates. It was shown that full-length recombinant PrP undergoes beta-sheet aggregation on high-pressure-induced destabilization. By tuning the physicochemical conditions, the assembly process evolves through two distinct pathways leading to the irreversible formation of spherical particles or amyloid fibrils, respectively. When the PrP aggregation propensity is enhanced, high pressure induces the formation of a partially unfolded aggregated protein, Agg(HP), which relaxes at ambient pressure to form amorphous aggregates. The latter largely retain the native secondary structure. On prolonged incubation at high pressure, followed by depressurization, Agg(HP) transforms to a monodisperse population of spherical particles of about 20 nm in diameter, characterized by an essentially beta-sheet secondary structure. When the PrP aggregation propensity is decreased, an oligomeric reaction intermediate, I(HP), is formed under high pressure. After pressure release, I(HP) relaxes to the original native structure. However, on prolonged incubation at high pressure and subsequent depressurization, it transforms to amyloid fibrils. Structural evaluation, using optical spectroscopic methods, demonstrates that the conformation adopted by the subfibrillar oligomeric intermediate, I(HP), constitutes a necessary prerequisite for the formation of amyloids. The use of high-pressure perturbation thus provides an insight into the molecular mechanism of the first stages of PrP misfolding into amyloids.  相似文献   

8.
Prion protein (PrP) amyloid formation is a central feature of genetic and acquired prion diseases such as Gerstmann-Str?ussler-Scheinker disease (GSS) and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The major component of GSS amyloid is a PrP fragment spanning residues approximately 82-146, which when synthesized as a peptide, readily forms fibrils featuring GSS amyloid. The present study employed surface plasmon resonance (SPR) to characterize the binding events underlying PrP82-146 oligomerization at the first stages of fibrillization, according to evidence suggesting a pathogenic role of prefibrillar oligomers rather than mature amyloid fibrils. We followed in real time the binding reactions occurring during short term (seconds) addition of PrP82-146 small oligomers (1-5-mers, flowing species) onto soluble prefibrillar PrP82-146 aggregates immobilized on the sensor surface. SPR data confirmed very efficient aggregation/elongation, consistent with the hypothesis of nucleation-dependent polymerization process. Much lower binding was observed when PrP82-146 flowed onto the scrambled sequence of PrP82-146 or onto prefibrillar Abeta42 aggregates. As previously found with Abeta40, SPR data could be adequately fitted by equations modeling the "dock-and-lock" mechanism, in which the "locking" step is due to sequential conformational changes, each increasing the affinity of the monomer for the fibril until a condition of irreversible binding is reached. However, these conformational changes (i.e. the locking steps) appear to be faster and easier with PrP82-146 than with Abeta40. Such differences suggest that PrP82-146 has a greater propensity to polymerize and greater stability of the aggregates.  相似文献   

9.
In recent studies, we developed a protocol for in vitro conversion of full-length mouse recombinant PrP (Mo rPrP23-230) into amyloid fibrils [Bocharova et al. (2005) J. Mol. Biol. 346, 645-659]. Because amyloid fibrils produced from recombinant Mo PrP89-230 display infectivity [Legname et al. (2004) Science 305, 673-676], polymerizatiom of rPrPs in vitro represents a valuable model for elucidating the mechanism of prion conversion. Unexpectedly, when the same conversion protocol was used for hamster (Ha) rPrP23-231, we experienced substantial difficulties in forming fibrils. While searching for potential reasons of our failure to produce fibrils, we probed the effect of methionine oxidation in rPrP. We found that oxidation of methionines interferes with the formation of rPrP fibrils and that this effect is more profound for Ha than for Mo rPrP. To minimize the level of spontaneous oxidation, we developed a new protocol for rPrP purification, in which highly amyloidogenic Ha rPrP with minimal levels of oxidized residues was produced. Furthermore, our studies revealed that oxidation of methionines in preformed fibrils inhibited subsequent maturation of fibrils into proteinase K-resistant PrP(Sc)-like conformation (PrP-res). Our data are consistent with the proposition that conformational changes within the central region of the protein (residues 90-140) are essential for adopting PrP-res conformation and demonstrate that methionine oxidation interferes with this process. These studies provide new insight into the mechanism of prion polymerization, solve a long-standing practical problem in producing PrP-res fibrils from full-length PrP, and may help in identifying new genetic and environmental factors that modulate prion disease.  相似文献   

10.
Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker (GSS) disease is a familial neurological disorder pathologically characterized by amyloid deposition in the cerebrum and cerebellum. The GSS amyloid is immunoreactive to antisera raised against the hamster prion protein (PrP) 27-30. This is a proteinase K-resistant glycoprotein of 27-30 kd that is derived from an abnormal isoform of a neuronal glycoprotein of 33-35 kd designated PrPSc and is a molecular marker of amyloid fibrils isolated from animals with scrapie and humans with related disorders. We have purified and characterized proteins extracted from amyloid plaque cores isolated from two patients of the Indiana kindred of GSS disease. We found that the major component of GSS amyloid is an 11 kd degradation product of PrP, whose N-terminus corresponds to the glycine residue at position 58 of the amino acid sequence deduced from the human PrP cDNA. In addition, amyloid fractions contained larger PrP fragments with apparently intact N-termini and amyloid P component. These findings suggest that the disease process leads to proteolytic cleavage of PrP, generating an amyloidogenic peptide that polymerizes into insoluble fibrils. The N-terminal cleavage of PrP in GSS disease occurs at a tryptophan-glycine peptide bond identical to that cleaved by proteinase K in vitro to generate PrP 27-30 from hamster PrPSc at codon 90. Since no mutations of the structural PrP gene have been found in the Indiana family of GSS disease, it is conceivable that factors other than the primary structure of PrP play a crucial role in the process of amyloid formation and the development of clinical neurologic dysfunction.  相似文献   

11.
《Biophysical journal》2020,118(6):1270-1278
Membrane interactions of amyloidogenic proteins constitute central determinants both in protein aggregation as well as in amyloid cytotoxicity. Most reported studies of amyloid peptide-membrane interactions have employed model membrane systems combined with application of spectroscopy methods or microscopy analysis of individual binding events. Here, we applied for the first time, to our knowledge, imaging flow cytometry for investigating interactions of representative amyloidogenic peptides, namely, the 106–126 fragment of prion protein (PrP(106–126)) and the human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP), with giant lipid vesicles. Imaging flow cytometry was also applied to examine the inhibition of PrP(106–126)-membrane interactions by epigallocatechin gallate, a known modulator of amyloid peptide aggregation. We show that imaging flow cytometry provided comprehensive population-based statistical information upon morphology changes of the vesicles induced by PrP(106–126) and hIAPP. Specifically, the experiments reveal that both PrP(106–126) and hIAPP induced dramatic transformations of the vesicles, specifically disruption of the spherical shapes, reduction of vesicle circularity, lobe formation, and modulation of vesicle compactness. Interesting differences, however, were apparent between the impact of the two peptides upon the model membranes. The morphology analysis also showed that epigallocatechin gallate ameliorated vesicle disruption by PrP(106–126). Overall, this study demonstrates that imaging flow cytometry provides powerful means for disclosing population-based morphological membrane transformations induced by amyloidogenic peptides and their inhibition by aggregation modulators.  相似文献   

12.
《Seminars in Virology》1996,7(3):189-200
Prion protein (PrP) amyloidosis is a feature of Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker disease (GSS) and prion protein cerebral amyloid angiopathy (PrP-CAA). GSS and PrP-CAA are associated with point mutations of the prion protein gene (PRNP); there is a broad spectrum of clinical presentations and the main signs are ataxia, spastic paraparesis, extrapyramidal signs and dementia. In GSS, parenchymal amyloid may be associated with spongiform changes or neurofibrillary lesions; in PrP-CAA, vascular amyloid is associated with neurofibrillary lesions. In the two diseases, a major component of the amyloid fibrils is a 7 kDa peptide, approximately spanning residues 81–150 of PrP.  相似文献   

13.
The possibility of inhibition of chaperonin functional activity by amyloid proteins was studied. It was found that the ovine prion protein PrP as well as its oligomeric and fibrillar forms are capable of binding with the chaperonin GroEL. Besides, GroEL was shown to promote amyloid aggregation of the monomeric and oligomeric PrP as well as PrP fibrils. The monomeric PrP was shown to inhibit the GroEL-assisted reactivation of the glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). The oligomers of PrP decelerate the GroEL-assisted reactivation of GAPDH, and PrP fibrils did not affect this process. The chaperonin GroEL is capable of interacting with GAPDH and different PrP forms simultaneously. A possible role of the inhibition of chaperonins by amyloid proteins in the misfolding of the enzymes involved in cell metabolism and in progression of neurodegenerative diseases of amyloid nature is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Prion diseases are characterized by the accumulation of altered forms of the prion protein (termed PrP(Sc)) in the brain. Unlike the normal protein, PrP(Sc) isoforms have a high content of beta-sheet secondary structure, are protease-resistant, and form insoluble aggregates and amyloid fibrils. Evidence indicates that they are responsible for neuropathological changes (i.e. nerve cell degeneration and glial cell activation) and transmissibility of the disease process. Here, we show that the antibiotic tetracycline: (i) binds to amyloid fibrils generated by synthetic peptides corresponding to residues 106-126 and 82-146 of human PrP; (ii) hinders assembly of these peptides into amyloid fibrils; (iii) reverts the protease resistance of PrP peptide aggregates and PrP(Sc) extracted from brain tissue of patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease; (iv) prevents neuronal death and astrocyte proliferation induced by PrP peptides in vitro. NMR spectroscopy revealed several through-space interactions between aromatic protons of tetracycline and side-chain protons of Ala(117-119), Val(121-122) and Leu(125) of PrP 106-126. These properties make tetracycline a prototype of compounds with the potential of inactivating the pathogenic forms of PrP.  相似文献   

15.
The prion protein undergoes a profound conformational change when the cellular isoform (PrP(C)) is converted into the disease-causing form (PrP(Sc)). Limited proteolysis of PrP(Sc) produces PrP 27-30, which readily polymerizes into amyloid. To study the relationship between PrP amyloid and infectivity, we employed organic solvents that perturb protein conformation. Hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP), which promotes alpha-helix formation, modified the ultrastructure of PrP amyloid and decreased the beta-sheet content as well as prion infectivity. HFIP reversibly decreased the binding of Congo red dye to the PrP amyloid rods while inactivation of prion infectivity was irreversible. In contrast, 1,1,1-trifluoro-2-propanol (TFIP) did not inactivate prion infectivity but like HFIP, TFIP did alter the morphology of the rods and abolished Congo red binding. Solubilization using various solvents and detergents produced monomeric and dimeric PrP that lacked infectivity. Proteinase K resistance of detergent-treated PrP 27-30 showed no correlation with scrapie infectivity. Our results separate prion infectivity from the amyloid properties of PrP 27-30 and underscore the dependence of prion infectivity on PrP(Sc) conformation. These findings also demonstrate that the specific beta-sheet-rich structures required for prion infectivity can be differentiated from those required for amyloid formation.  相似文献   

16.
Reaction of H(2)O(2) with the recombinant SHa(29-231) prion protein resulted in rapid oxidation of multiple methionine residues. Susceptibility to oxidation of individual residues, assessed by mass spectrometry after digestion with CNBr and lysC, was in general a function of solvent exposure. Met 109 and Met 112, situated in the highly flexible amino terminus, and key residues of the toxic peptide PrP (106-126), showed the greatest susceptibility. Met 129, a residue located in a polymorphic position in human PrP and modulating risk of prion disease, was also easily oxidized, as was Met 134. The structural effect of H(2)O(2)-induced methionine oxidation on PrP was studied by CD spectroscopy. As opposed to copper catalyzed oxidation, which results in extensive aggregation of PrP, this reaction led only to a modest increase in beta-sheet structure. The high number of solvent exposed methionine residues in PrP suggests their possible role as protective endogenous antioxidants.  相似文献   

17.
A major hallmark of prion diseases is the cerebral amyloid accumulation of the pathogenic PrP(Sc), an abnormally misfolded, protease-resistant, and beta-sheet rich protein. PrP106-126 is the key domain responsible for the conformational conversion and aggregation of PrP. It shares important physicochemical characteristics with PrP(Sc) and presents similar neurotoxicity as PrP(Sc). By combination of fluorescence polarization, dye release assay and in situ time-lapse atomic force microscopy (AFM), we investigated the PrP106-126 amide interacting with the large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) and the supported lipid bilayers (SLBs). The results suggest that the interactions involve a poration-mediated process: firstly, the peptide binding results in the formation of pores in the membranes, which penetrate only half of the membranes; subsequently, PrP106-126 amide undergoes the poration-mediated diffusion in the SLBs, represented by the formation and expansion of the flat high-rise domains (FHDs). The possible mechanisms of the interactions between PrP106-126 amide and lipid membranes are proposed based on our observations.  相似文献   

18.
The fibrillogenic peptide corresponding to the residues 106-126 of the prion protein sequence (PrP 106-126) is largely used to explore the neurotoxic mechanisms underlying the prion disease. However, whether the neuronal toxicity of PrP 106-126 is caused by a soluble or fibrillar form of this peptide is still unknown. The aim of this study was to correlate the structural state of this peptide with its neurotoxicity. Here we show that the two conserved Gly114 and Gly119 residues, in force of their intrinsic flexibility, prevent the peptide assuming a structured conformation, favouring its aggregation in amyloid fibrils. The substitution of both Gly114 and Gly119 with alanine residues (PrP 106-126 AA mutated peptide) reduces the flexibility of this prion fragment and results in a soluble, beta-structured peptide. Moreover, PrP 106-126 AA fragment was highly toxic when incubated with neuroblastoma cells, likely behaving as a neurotoxic protofibrillar intermediate of the wild-type PrP 106-126. These data further confirm that the fibrillar aggregation is not necessary for the induction of the toxic effects of PrP 106-126.  相似文献   

19.
Inhibition of amyloid fibrillogenesis and toxicity by a peptide chaperone   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Aggregation of proteins in tissues is associated with several diseases, including Alzheimer's disease. It is characterized by the accumulation of amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) in the extracellular spaces of the brain cells, resulting in neuronal death and other pathological changes. alpha-Crystallin, a small heat-shock protein in lens, and a peptide chaperone having the functional site sequence DFVIFLDVKHFSPEDLTVK of alphaA-crystallin may inhibit Abeta fibrillogenesis and toxicity. The peptide chaperone (mini-alphaA-crystallin), having an Abeta interacting domain and a complex solubilizing domain, was shown in previous studies to prevent aggregation of several proteins under denaturing conditions. In this in vitro study, using transmission electron microscopy and thioflavin T binding assay, we show that mini-alphaA-crystallin arrests the fibril formation of Abeta peptides. Mini-alphaA-crystallin also suppresses the toxic action of Abeta on rat pheochromocytoma (PC 12) cells. The wide chaperoning capability of the peptide and its ability to inhibit amyloid fibril formation and suppress toxicity suggest that mini-alphaA-crystallin may serve as a universal chaperone in controlling diseases of protein aggregation, including Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

20.
Pathway complexity of prion protein assembly into amyloid   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
In vivo under pathological conditions, the normal cellular form of the prion protein, PrP(C) (residues 23-231), misfolds to the pathogenic isoform PrP(Sc), a beta-rich aggregated pathogenic multimer. Proteinase K digestion of PrP(Sc) leads to a proteolytically resistant core, PrP 27-30 (residues 90-231), that can form amyloid fibrils. To study the kinetic pathways of amyloid formation in vitro, we used unglycosylated recombinant PrP corresponding to the proteinase K-resistant core of PrP(Sc) and found that it can adopt two non-native abnormal isoforms, a beta-oligomer and an amyloid fibril. Several lines of kinetic data suggest that the beta-oligomer is not on the pathway to amyloid formation. The preferences for forming either a beta-oligomer or amyloid can be dictated by experimental conditions, with acidic pH similar to that seen in endocytic vesicles favoring the beta-oligomer and neutral pH favoring amyloid. Although both abnormal isoforms have high beta-sheet content and bind 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonate, they are dissimilar structurally. Multiple pathways of misfolding and the formation of distinct beta-sheet-rich abnormal isoforms may explain the difficulties in refolding PrP(Sc) in vitro, the need for a PrP(Sc) template, and the significant variation in disease presentation and neuropathology.  相似文献   

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