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Different propensity to form amyloid fibrils by two homologous proteins-Human stefins A and B: searching for an explanation
Authors:Jenko Sasa  Skarabot Miha  Kenig Manca  Guncar Gregor  Musevic Igor  Turk Dusan  Zerovnik Eva
Institution:Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Jozef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Abstract:By using ThT fluorescence, X-ray diffraction, and atomic force microscopy (AFM), it has been shown that human stefins A and B (subfamily A of cystatins) form amyloid fibrils. Both protein fibrils show the 4.7 A and 10 A reflections characteristic for cross beta-structure. Similar height of approximately 3 nm and longitudinal repeat of 25-27 nm were observed by AFM for both protein fibrils. Fibrils with a double height of 5.6 nm were only observed with stefin A. The fibril's width for stefin A fibrils, as observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), was in the same range as previously reported for stefin B (Zerovnik et al., Biochem Biophys Acta 2002;1594:1-5). The conditions needed to undergo fibrillation differ, though. The amyloid fibrils start to form at pH 5 for stefin B, whereas in stefin A, preheated sample has to be acidified to pH < 2.5. In both cases, adding TFE, seeding, and alignment in a strong magnetic field accelerate the fibril growth. Visual analysis of the three-dimensional structures of monomers and domain-swapped dimers suggests that major differences in stability of both homologues stem from arrangement of specific salt bridges, which fix alpha-helix (and the alpha-loop) to beta-sheet in stefin A monomeric and dimeric forms.
Keywords:cystatin  amyloid fibril  domain‐swapped dimer  ionic interactions  conformational disease  AFM  X‐ray diffraction  protein modeling
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