4.8 Article

Local Cooperativity in an Amyloidogenic State of Human Lysozyme Observed at Atomic Resolution

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 132, Issue 44, Pages 15580-15588

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja103524m

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Boerhinger Ingelheim Fonds
  2. Murray Edwards College, Cambridge
  3. BBSRC (U.K.)
  4. HFSP [LT0798/2005]
  5. National Science Council of the Republic of China, Taiwan [NSC97-2917-1-564-102]
  6. IRB Barcelona
  7. Belgian F.R.S.-F.N.R.S
  8. Belgian Government [IAP P6-19]
  9. BBSRC [BB/E019927/1]
  10. Cancer Research UK
  11. Wellcome Trust
  12. Swedish Research Council
  13. Goran Gustafsson Foundation for Research in Natural Sciences and Medicine
  14. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  15. Leverhulme Trust
  16. ICREA
  17. MICINN [CTQ2009-08850]
  18. European Commission [LSHM-CT-2006-037525]
  19. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/H003843/1, BB/E019927/1, BB/E013228/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  20. BBSRC [BB/H003843/1, BB/E013228/1, BB/E019927/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  21. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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The partial unfolding of human lysozyme underlies its conversion from the soluble state into amyloid fibrils observed in a fatal hereditary form of systemic amyloidosis. To understand the molecular origins of the disease, it is critical to characterize the structural and physicochemical properties of the amyloidogenic states of the protein. Here we provide a high-resolution view of the unfolding process at low pH for three different lysozyme variants, the wild-type protein and the mutants I56T and I59T, which show variable stabilities and propensities to aggregate in vitro. Using a range of biophysical techniques that includes differential scanning calorimetry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we demonstrate that thermal unfolding under amyloidogenic solution conditions involves a cooperative loss of native tertiary structure, followed by progressive unfolding of a compact, molten globule-like denatured state ensemble as the temperature is increased. The width of the temperature window over which the denatured ensemble progressively unfolds correlates with the relative amyloidogenicity and stability of these variants, and the region of lysozyme that unfolds first maps to that which forms the core of the amyloid fibrils formed under similar conditions. Together, these results present a coherent picture at atomic resolution of the initial events underlying amyloid formation by a globular protein.

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