4.4 Article

Conserved S/T Residues of the Human Chaperone DNAJB6 Are Required for Effective Inhibition of Aβ42 Amyloid Fibril Formation

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 57, Issue 32, Pages 4891-4902

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.8b00353

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LU Research School for Pharmaceutical Science
  2. Magnus Bergwall's Stiftelse
  3. EU Erasmus Program
  4. China Scholarship Council
  5. Swedish Research Council [2014-5815, 2015-014]
  6. ERC [340890, 337969]
  7. Nanometer Structure Consortium
  8. Goran Gustafsson's Foundation for Research in Natural Sciences and Medicine
  9. Wellcome Trust
  10. Newman Foundation
  11. Cambridge Centre for Misfolding Disease
  12. Marie Curie fellowship scheme
  13. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  14. Center for Misfolding Diseases
  15. European Research Council (ERC) [337969, 340890] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The human molecular chaperone DNAJB6, an oligomeric protein with a conserved S/T-rich region, is an efficient suppressor of amyloid fibril formation by highly aggregation-prone peptides such as the A beta and polyQ peptides associated with Alzheimer's and Huntington's disease, respectively. We previously showed that DNAJB6 can inhibit the processes through which amyloid fibrils are formed via strong interactions with aggregated forms of A beta 42 that become sequestered. Here we report that the concentration-dependent capability of DNAJB6 to suppress fibril formation in thioflavin T fluorescence assays decreases progressively with an increasing number of S/T substitutions, with an almost complete loss of suppression when 18 S/T residues are substituted. The kinetics of primary nucleation in particular are affected. No detectable changes in the structure are caused by the substitutions. Also, the level of binding of DNAJB6 to A beta 42 decreases with the S/T substitutions, as determined by surface plasmon resonance and microscale thermophoresis. The aggregation process monitored using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed that DNAJB6, in contrast to a mutational variant with 18 S/T residues substituted, can keep monomeric A beta 42 soluble for an extended time. The inhibition of the primary nucleation is likely to depend on hydroxyl groups in side chains of the S/T residues, and hydrogen bonding with A beta 42 is one plausible molecular mechanism, although other possibilities cannot be excluded. The loss of the ability to suppress fibril formation upon S/T to A substitution was previously observed also for polyQ peptides, suggesting that the S/T residues in the DNAJB6-like chaperones have a general ability to inhibit amyloid fibril formation by different aggregation-prone peptides.

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