4.8 Article

The Role of Protein Thermodynamics and Primary Structure in Fibrillogenesis of Variable Domains from Immunoglobulin Light Chains

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 141, Issue 34, Pages 13562-13571

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b05499

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. NIH [DK46335]
  4. Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology

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Immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis is a protein aggregation disease that leads to proteinaceous deposits in a variety of organs in the body and, if untreated, ultimately results in death. The mechanisms by which light-chain aggregation occurs are not well understood. Here we have used solution NMR spectroscopy and biophysical studies to probe immunoglobulin variable domain lambda V6-57 V-L aggregation, a process that appears to drive the degenerative phenotypes in amyloidosis patients. Our results establish that aggregation proceeds via the unfolded state. We identify, through NMR relaxation experiments recorded on the unfolded domain ensemble, a series of hotspots that could be involved in the initial phases of aggregate formation. Mutational analysis of these hotspots reveals that the region that includes K16-R24 is particularly aggregation prone. Notably, this region includes the site of the R24G substitution, a mutation that is found in variable domains of lambda light-chain deposits in 25% of patients. The R24G lambda V6-57 V-L domain aggregates more rapidly than would be expected on the basis of thermodynamic stability alone, while substitutions in many of the aggregation-prone regions significantly slow down fibril formation.

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