4.7 Article

Structurally distinct external solvent-exposed domains drive replication of major human prions

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009642

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01NS103848, P30CA043703]
  2. CDC [NU38CK00048]

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Research has found structural differences between different strains of human prions, which are correlated with their susceptibility to inactivation. The seeding activity of different prion strains is primarily determined by the structure of solvent-exposed domains. The structural characteristics of human prion strains suggest that subtle changes in surface domain organization play a critical role in the infectivity, propagation rate, and targeting of specific brain structures.
Author summary Sporadic human prion diseases are conceivably the most heterogenous neurodegenerative disorders and a growing body of research indicates that they are caused by distinct strains of prions. By parallel monitoring their replication potency and progressive hydroxyl radical modification of amino acid side chains during synchrotron irradiation, we identified major differences in the structural organization that correlate with distinct inactivation susceptibility of a given human prion strain. Furthermore, our data demonstrated, for the first time, that seeding activity of different strains of infectious brain-derived human prions is primarily function of distinct solvent-exposed structural domains, and implicate them in the initial binding of cellular isoform of prion protein (PrPC) as a critical step in human prion replication and infectivity. There is a limited understanding of structural attributes that encode the iatrogenic transmissibility and various phenotypes of prions causing the most common human prion disease, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD). Here we report the detailed structural differences between major sCJD MM1, MM2, and VV2 prions determined with two complementary synchrotron hydroxyl radical footprinting techniques-mass spectrometry (MS) and conformation dependent immunoassay (CDI) with a panel of Europium-labeled antibodies. Both approaches clearly demonstrate that the phenotypically distant prions differ in a major way with regard to their structural organization, and synchrotron-generated hydroxyl radicals progressively inhibit their seeding potency in a strain and structure-specific manner. Moreover, the seeding rate of sCJD prions is primarily determined by strain-specific structural organization of solvent-exposed external domains of human prion particles that control the seeding activity. Structural characteristics of human prion strains suggest that subtle changes in the organization of surface domains play a critical role as a determinant of human prion infectivity, propagation rate, and targeting of specific brain structures.

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