4.6 Article

Interaction of the Molecular Chaperone DNAJB6 with Growing Arnyloid-beta 42 (Aβ42) Aggregates Leads to Sub-stoichiometric Inhibition of Amyloid Formation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 45, Pages 31066-31076

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.595124

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LU Research School for Pharmaceutical Science
  2. Magnus Berg walls Stiftelse
  3. Egyptian Ministry of Higher Education
  4. Nanometer Structure Consortium for IR system
  5. Swedish Research Council
  6. Linneus Centre Organizing Molecular Matter for CD spectrometer, plate readers
  7. Alzheimer Foundation Sweden
  8. Swiss National Science Foundation
  9. Frances and Augustus Newman Foundation
  10. BBSRC
  11. European Commission
  12. Welcome Trust
  13. Marie Curie fellowship scheme for career development
  14. Senter Novem [IOP-IGE07004]

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The human molecular chaperone protein DNAJB6 was recently found to inhibit the formation of amyloid fibrils from polyglutamine peptides associated with neurodegenerative disorders such as Huntington disease. We show in the present study that DNAJB6 also inhibits amyloid formation by an even more aggregation-prone peptide (the amyloid-beta peptide, A beta 42, implicated in Alzheimer disease) in a highly efficient manner. By monitoring fibril formation using Thioflavin T fluorescence and far-UV CD spectroscopy, we have found that the aggregation of A beta 42 is retarded by DNAJB6 in a concentration-dependent manner, extending to very low sub -stoichiometric molar ratios of chaperone to peptide. Quantitative kinetic analysis and immunochemistry studies suggest that the high inhibitory efficiency is due to the interactions of the chaperone with aggregated forms of A beta 42 rather than the monomeric form of the peptide. This interaction prevents the growth of such species to longer fibrils and inhibits the formation of new amyloid fibrils through both primary and secondary nucleation. A low dissociation rate of DNAJB6 from A beta 42 aggregates leads to its incorporation into growing fibrils and hence to its gradual depletion from solution with time. When DNAJB6 is eventually depleted, fibril proliferation takes place, but the inhibitory activity can be prolonged by introducing DNAJB6 at regular intervals during the aggregation reaction. These results reveal the highly efficacious mode of action of this molecular chaperone against protein aggregation, and demonstrate that the role of molecular chaperones can involve interactions with multiple aggregated species leading to the inhibition of both principal nucleation pathways through which aggregates are able to form.

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