4.7 Article

The CDR1 and Other Regions of Immunoglobulin Light Chains are Hot Spots for Amyloid Aggregation

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-39781-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SEP-Conacyt from Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT) de Mexico [CB: 169659]
  2. Instituto Nacional de Medicina Genomica (INMEGEN)
  3. Royal Society-backed Newton Mobility Grant [006075]
  4. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT) [582625]

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Immunoglobulin light chain-derived (AL) amyloidosis is a debilitating disease without known cure. Almost nothing is known about the structural factors driving the amyloidogenesis of the light chains. This study aimed to identify the fibrillogenic hotspots of the model protein 6aJL2 and in pursuing this goal, two complementary approaches were applied. One of them was based on several web-based computational tools optimized to predict fibrillogenic/aggregation-prone sequences based on different structural and biophysical properties of the polypeptide chain. Then, the predictions were confirmed with an ad-hoc synthetic peptide library. In the second approach, 6aJL2 protein was proteolyzed with trypsin, and the products incubated in aggregation-promoting conditions. Then, the aggregation-prone fragments were identified by combining standard proteomic methods, and the results validated with a set of synthetic peptides with the sequence of the tryptic fragments. Both strategies coincided to identify a fibrillogenic hotspot located at the CDR1 and beta-strand C of the protein, which was confirmed by scanning proline mutagenesis analysis. However, only the proteolysis-based strategy revealed additional fibrillogenic hotspots in two other regions of the protein. It was shown that a fibrillogenic hotspot associated to the CDR1 is also encoded by several kappa and lambda germline variable domain gene segments. Some parts of this study have been included in the chapter The Structural Determinants of the Immunoglobulin Light Chain Amyloid Aggregation, published in Physical Biology of Proteins and Peptides, Springer 2015 (ISBN 978-3-319-21687-4).

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