4.7 Article

The Effect of Octapeptide Repeats on Prion Folding and Misfolding

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22041800

Keywords

prion; octapeptide; folding; misfolding; fibril

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 104-2113-M-194-006, MOST 105-2113-M-194-005, MOST 106-2113-194-009]

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Octapeptide repeats play a crucial role in the folding and misfolding of PrP, influencing the formation of amyloid fibrils with distinct structures and impacting the cytotoxicity in the onset of prion diseases.
Misfolding of prion protein (PrP) into amyloid aggregates is the central feature of prion diseases. PrP has an amyloidogenic C-terminal domain with three alpha-helices and a flexible tail in the N-terminal domain in which multiple octapeptide repeats are present in most mammals. The role of the octapeptides in prion diseases has previously been underestimated because the octapeptides are not located in the amyloidogenic domain. Correlation between the number of octapeptide repeats and age of onset suggests the critical role of octapeptide repeats in prion diseases. In this study, we have investigated four PrP variants without any octapeptides and with 1, 5 and 8 octapeptide repeats. From the comparison of the protein structure and the thermal stability of these proteins, as well as the characterization of amyloids converted from these PrP variants, we found that octapeptide repeats affect both folding and misfolding of PrP creating amyloid fibrils with distinct structures. Deletion of octapeptides forms fewer twisted fibrils and weakens the cytotoxicity. Insertion of octapeptides enhances the formation of typical silk-like fibrils but it does not increase the cytotoxicity. There might be some threshold effect and increasing the number of peptides beyond a certain limit has no further effect on the cell viability, though the reasons are unclear at this stage. Overall, the results of this study elucidate the molecular mechanism of octapeptides at the onset of prion diseases.

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