4.6 Article

Gerstmann-Strarussler-Scheinker disease amyloid protein polymerizes according to the dock-and-lock model

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 281, Issue 2, Pages 843-849

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M506164200

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Prion protein (PrP) amyloid formation is a central feature of genetic and acquired prion diseases such as Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker disease (GSS) and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The major component of GSS amyloid is a PrP fragment spanning residues -82-146, which when synthesized as a peptide, readily forms fibrils featuring GSS amyloid. The present study employed surface plasmon resonance (SPR) to characterize the binding events underlying PrP82-146 oligomerization at the first stages of fibrillization, according to evidence suggesting a pathogenic role of prefibrillar oligomers rather than mature amyloid fibrils. We followed in real time the binding reactions occurring during short term (seconds) addition of PrP82-146 small oligomers (1-5-mers, flowing species) onto soluble prefibrillar PrP82-146 aggregates immobilized on the sensor surface. SPR data confirmed very efficient aggregation/ elongation, consistent with the hypothesis of nucleation-dependent polymerization process. Much lower binding was observed when PrP82-146 flowed onto the scrambled sequence of PrP82-146 or onto prefibrillar A beta 42 aggregates. As previously found with A beta 40, SPR data could be adequately fitted by equations modeling the dock-and-lock mechanism, in which the locking step is due to sequential conformational changes, each increasing the affinity of the monomer for the fibril until a condition of irreversible binding is reached. However, these conformational changes (i.e. the locking steps) appear to be faster and easier with PrP82-146 than with A beta 40. Such differences suggest that PrP82-146 has a greater propensity to polymerize and greater stability of the aggregates.

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