Two Amyloid States of the Prion Protein Display Significantly Different Folding Patterns |
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Authors: | Valeriy G. Ostapchenko Natallia Makarava K. Peter R. Nilsson Ilia V. Baskakov |
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Affiliation: | 1 Center for Biomedical Engineering and Technology, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA 2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, UCLA-DOE Institute for Genomics and Proteomics, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1570, USA 3 Department of Chemistry, Linkoping University, Linkoping, Sweden 4 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA |
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Abstract: | It has been well established that a single amino acid sequence can give rise to several conformationally distinct amyloid states. The extent to which amyloid structures formed within the same sequence are different, however, remains unclear. To address this question, we studied two amyloid states (referred to as R- and S-fibrils) produced in vitro from highly purified full-length recombinant prion protein. Several biophysical techniques including X-ray diffraction, CD, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), hydrogen-deuterium exchange, proteinase K digestion, and binding of a conformation-sensitive fluorescence dye revealed that R- and S-fibrils have substantially different secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures. While both states displayed a 4. 8-Å meridional X-ray diffraction typical for amyloid cross-β-spines, they showed markedly different equatorial profiles, suggesting different folding pattern of β-strands. The experiments on hydrogen-deuterium exchange monitored by FTIR revealed that only small fractions of amide protons were protected in R- or S-fibrils, an argument for the dynamic nature of their cross-β-structure. Despite this fact, both amyloid states were found to be very stable conformationally as judged from temperature-induced denaturation monitored by FTIR and the conformation-sensitive dye. Upon heating to 80 °C, only local unfolding was revealed, while individual state-specific cross-β features were preserved. The current studies demonstrated that the two amyloid states formed by the same amino acid sequence exhibited significantly different folding patterns that presumably reflect two different architectures of cross-β-structure. Both S- and R-fibrils, however, shared high conformational stability, arguing that the energy landscape for protein folding and aggregation can contain several deep free-energy minima. |
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Keywords: | PrPC, normal cellular isoform of the prion protein PrPSc, abnormal, disease-associated isoform of the prion protein PrP, recombinant prion protein α-PrP, recombinant prion protein refolded into monomeric α-helical conformation AFM, atomic force microscopy PK, proteinase K H/D, hydrogen-deuterium PTAA, poly(thiophene-acetic acid) LCP, luminescent-conjugated polythiophene EM, electron microscopy FTIR, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy |
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