4.8 Article

Serum amyloid A forms stable oligomers that disrupt vesicles at lysosomal pH and contribute to the pathogenesis of reactive amyloidosis

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707120114

Keywords

prefibrillar amyloid oligomers; intrinsically disordered proteins; pH-induced conformational changes; hydrophobic cavities; acute-phase reactant

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM 067260]
  2. Stewart Amyloidosis Research Endowment Fund
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Foundation [HA 7138/2-1]

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Serum amyloid A (SAA) is an acute-phase plasma protein that functions in innate immunity and lipid homeostasis. SAA is a protein precursor of reactive AA amyloidosis, the major complication of chronic inflammation and one of the most common human systemic amyloid diseases worldwide. Most circulating SAA is protected from proteolysis and misfolding by binding to plasma high-density lipoproteins. However, unbound soluble SAA is intrinsically disordered and is either rapidly degraded or forms amyloid in a lysosome-initiated process. Although acidic pH promotes amyloid fibril formation by this and many other proteins, the molecular underpinnings are unclear. We used an array of spectroscopic, biochemical, and structural methods to uncover that at pH 3.5-4.5, murine SAA1 forms stable soluble oligomers that are maximally folded at pH 4.3 with similar to 35% a-helix and are unusually resistant to proteolysis. In solution, these oligomers neither readily convert into mature fibrils nor bind lipid surfaces via their amphipathic a-helices in a manner typical of apolipoproteins. Rather, these oligomers undergo an a-helix to beta-sheet conversion catalyzed by lipid vesicles and disrupt these vesicles, suggesting a membranolytic potential. Our results provide an explanation for the lysosomal origin of AA amyloidosis. They suggest that high structural stability and resistance to proteolysis of SAA oligomers at pH 3.5-4.5 help them escape lysosomal degradation, promote SAA accumulation in lysosomes, and ultimately damage cellular membranes and liberate intracellular amyloid. We posit that these soluble prefibrillar oligomers provide a missing link in our understanding of the development of AA amyloidosis.

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