3.8 Article

Selective observation of semi-rigid non-core residues in dynamically complex mutant huntingtin protein fibrils

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY-X
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.yjsbx.2022.100077

Keywords

Intermediate-timescale motion; Solid state NMR; Huntington?s disease; Polyglutamine; Dynamics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. Achievement Rewards for College Scientists (ARCS) Foundation
  3. CHDI Foundation
  4. CampagneTeam Huntington foundation
  5. [R01 GM112678]
  6. [R01 GM113908]
  7. [T32 GM088119]

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This study utilizes magic angle spinning solid-state NMR experiments to probe semi-rigid residues near the fibril core of amyloid-forming proteins and examines the impact of solvent dynamics on the dynamics of fibril segments. Dynamic spectral editing based on a combination of cross-polarization ssNMR with selective dipolar dephasing allows for the observation of weak signals of solvent-mobilized residues while suppressing the strong background signals from the rigid core. This approach provides valuable insights into the structure and properties of protein fibrils.
Many amyloid-forming proteins, which are normally intrinsically disordered, undergo a disorder-to-order transition to form fibrils with a rigid beta-sheet core flanked by disordered domains. Solid-state NMR (ssNMR) and cryogenic electron microscopy (cryoEM) excel at resolving the rigid structures within amyloid cores but studying the dynamically disordered domains remains challenging. This challenge is exemplified by mutant huntingtin exon 1 (HttEx1), which self-assembles into pathogenic neuronal inclusions in Huntington disease (HD). The mutant protein's expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) segment forms a fibril core that is rigid and sequestered from the solvent. Beyond the core, solvent-exposed surface residues mediate biological interactions and other properties of fibril polymorphs. Here we deploy magic angle spinning ssNMR experiments to probe for semi-rigid residues proximal to the fibril core and examine how solvent dynamics impact the fibrils' segmental dynamics. Dynamic spectral editing (DYSE) 2D ssNMR based on a combination of cross-polarization (CP) ssNMR with selective dipolar dephasing reveals the weak signals of solvent-mobilized glutamine residues, while sup-pressing the normally strong background of rigid core signals. This type of 'intermediate motion selection' (IMS) experiment based on cross-polarization (CP) ssNMR, is complementary to INEPT-and CP-based measurements that highlight highly flexible or highly rigid protein segments, respectively. Integration of the IMS-DYSE element in standard CP-based ssNMR experiments permits the observation of semi-rigid residues in a variety of contexts, including in membrane proteins and protein complexes. We discuss the relevance of semi-rigid solvent-facing residues outside the fibril core to the latter's detection with specific dyes and positron emission tomography tracers.

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