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Structures of rat and human islet amyloid polypeptide IAPP(1-19) in micelles by NMR spectroscopy
Authors:Nanga Ravi Prakash Reddy  Brender Jeffrey R  Xu Jiadi  Veglia Gianluigi  Ramamoorthy Ayyalusamy
Institution:Department of Biophysics and Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1055, USA.
Abstract:Disruption of the cellular membrane by the amyloidogenic peptide IAPP (or amylin) has been implicated in beta-cell death during type 2 diabetes. While the structure of the mostly inert fibrillar form of IAPP has been investigated, the structural details of the highly toxic prefibrillar membrane-bound states of IAPP have been elusive. A recent study showed that a fragment of IAPP (residues 1-19) induces membrane disruption to a similar extent as the full-length peptide. However, unlike the full-length IAPP peptide, IAPP(1-19) is conformationally stable in an alpha-helical conformation when bound to the membrane. In vivo and in vitro measurements of membrane disruption indicate the rat version of IAPP(1-19), despite differing from hIAPP(1-19) by the single substitution of Arg18 for His18, is significantly less toxic than hIAPP(1-19), in agreement with the low toxicity of the full-length rat IAPP peptide. To investigate the origin of this difference at the atomic level, we have solved the structures of the human and rat IAPP(1-19) peptides in DPC micelles. While both rat and human IAPP(1-19) fold into similar mostly alpha-helical structures in micelles, paramagnetic quenching NMR experiments indicate a significant difference in the membrane orientation of hIAPP(1-19) and rIAPP(1-19). At pH 7.3, the more toxic hIAPP(1-19) peptide is buried deeper within the micelle, while the less toxic rIAPP(1-19) peptide is located at the surface of the micelle. Deprotonating H18 in hIAPP(1-19) reorients the peptide to the surface of the micelle. This change in orientation is in agreement with the significantly reduced ability of hIAPP(1-19) to cause membrane disruption at pH 6.0. This difference in peptide topology in the membrane may correspond to similar topology differences for the full-length human and rat IAPP peptides, with the toxic human IAPP peptide adopting a transmembrane orientation and the nontoxic rat IAPP peptide bound to the surface of the membrane.
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