4.8 Article

Structure and properties of α-synuclein and other amyloids determined at the amino acid level

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0507405102

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R21 CA099835, R21 CA118595, CA 099835, CA 118595, R33 CA099835] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM 031847, GM 074150, R01 GM074150, R01 GM031847, GM 205001] Funding Source: Medline

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The structure of a-synuclein (alpha-syn) amyloid was studied by hydrogen-deuterium exchange by using a fragment separation-MS analysis. The conditions used made it possible to distinguish the exchange of unprotected and protected amide hydrogens and to define the order/disorder boundaries at close to amino acid resolution. The soluble a-syn monomer exchanges its amide hydrogens with water hydrogens at random coil rates, consistent with its natively unstructured condition. In assembled amyloid, long N-terminal and C-terminal segments remain unprotected (residues 1-approximate to 38 and 102-140), although the N-terminal segment shows some heterogeneity. A continuous middle segment (residues approximate to 39-101) is strongly protected by systematically H-bonded cross-beta structure. This segment is much too long to fit the amyloid ribbon width, but non-H-bonded amides expected for direction-changing loops are not apparent. These results and other known constraints specify that a-syn amyloid adopts a chain fold like that suggested before for amyloid-beta [Petkova et aL (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA 99, 16742-16747] but with a short, H-bonded interlamina turn. More generally, we suggest that the prevalence of accidental amyloid formation derives mainly from the exceptional ability of the main chain in a structurally relaxed beta-conformation to adapt to and energy-minimize side-chain mismatching. Seeding specificity, strain variability, and species barriers then arise because newly added parallel in-register chains must faithfully reproduce the same set of adaptations.

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