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Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
Authors:Sofia B Carvalho  Hugo M Botelho  Sónia S Leal  Isabel Cardoso  Günter Fritz  Cláudio M Gomes
Institution:1. Instituto Tecnologia Química e Biológica, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Oeiras, Portugal.; 2. Molecular Neurobiology Unit, Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular, Porto, Portugal.; 3. Escola Superior Tecnologia Saúde Porto, Instituto Politécnico, Porto, Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal.; 4. Department of Neuropathology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.; Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Spain,
Abstract:S100 proteins are small dimeric calcium-binding proteins which control cell cycle, growth and differentiation via interactions with different target proteins. Intrinsic disorder is a hallmark among many signaling proteins and S100 proteins have been proposed to contain disorder-prone regions. Interestingly, some S100 proteins also form amyloids: S100A8/A9 forms fibrils in prostatic inclusions and S100A6 fibrillates in vitro and seeds SOD1 aggregation. Here we report a study designed to investigate whether β-aggregation is a feature extensive to more members of S100 family. In silico analysis of seven human S100 proteins revealed a direct correlation between aggregation and intrinsic disorder propensity scores, suggesting a relationship between these two independent properties. Averaged position-specific analysis and structural mapping showed that disorder-prone segments are contiguous to aggregation-prone regions and that whereas disorder is prominent on the hinge and target protein-interaction regions, segments with high aggregation propensity are found in ordered regions within the dimer interface. Acidic conditions likely destabilize the seven S100 studied by decreasing the shielding of aggregation-prone regions afforded by the quaternary structure. In agreement with the in silico analysis, hydrophobic moieties become accessible as indicated by strong ANS fluorescence. ATR-FTIR spectra support a structural inter-conversion from α-helices to intermolecular β-sheets, and prompt ThT-binding takes place with no noticeable lag phase. Dot blot analysis using amyloid conformational antibodies denotes a high diversity of conformers; subsequent analysis by TEM shows fibrils as dominant species. Altogether, our data suggests that β-aggregation and disorder-propensity are related properties in S100 proteins, and that the onset of aggregation is likely triggered by loss of protective tertiary and quaternary interactions.
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