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The protonation state of histidine 111 regulates the aggregation of the evolutionary most conserved region of the human prion protein
Authors:Luis Fonseca‐Ornelas  Markus Zweckstetter
Affiliation:1. Department for NMR‐Based Structural Biology, Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, G?ttingen, Germany;2. German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), G?ttingen, Germany;3. Department of Neurology, University Medical Center G?ttingen, University of G?ttingen, G?ttingen, Germany
Abstract:In a group of neurodegenerative diseases, collectively termed transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, the prion protein aggregates into β‐sheet rich amyloid‐like deposits. Because amyloid structure has been connected to different prion strains and cellular toxicity, it is important to obtain insight into the structural properties of prion fibrils. Using a combination of solution NMR spectroscopy, thioflavin‐T fluorescence and electron microscopy we here show that within amyloid fibrils of a peptide containing residues 108–143 of the human prion protein [humPrP (108–143)]—the evolutionary most conserved part of the prion protein ‐ residue H111 and S135 are in close spatial proximity and their interaction is critical for fibrillization. We further show that residues H111 and H140 share the same microenvironment in the unfolded, monomeric state of the peptide, but not in the fibrillar form. While protonation of H140 has little influence on fibrillization of humPrP (108–143), a positive charge at position 111 blocks the conformational change, which is necessary for amyloid formation of humPrP (108–143). Our study thus highlights the importance of protonation of histidine residues for protein aggregation and suggests point mutations to probe the structure of infectious prion particles.
Keywords:prion protein  NMR spectroscopy  amyloid  misfolding
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