4.5 Article

Mutations linked to interstitial lung disease can abrogate anti-amyloid function of prosurfactant protein C

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 416, Issue -, Pages 201-209

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20080981

Keywords

amyloid; Brichos domain; chaperone; interstitial lung disease; prosurfactant protein C (proSP-C); protein folding

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [10371]
  2. Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning
  3. National Institutes of Health [P01-HL61646]

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The newly synthesized proSP-C (surfactant protein C precursor) is an integral ER (endoplasmic reticulum) membrane protein with a single metastable polyvaline a-helical transmembrane domain that comprises two-thirds of the mature peptide. More than 20 mutations in the ER-lumenal CTC (C-terminal domain of proSP-C), are associated with ILD (interstitial lung disease), and some of the mutations cause intracellular accumulation of cytotoxic protein aggregates and a corresponding decrease in mature SP-C. In the present study, we showed that: (i) human embryonic kidney cells expressing the ILD-associated mutants proSP-C-L188Q and proSp-C-Delta Exon4 accumulate Congo Red-positive amyloid-like inclusions, whereas cells transfected with the mutant proSp-C-173T do not; (ii) transfection of CTC into cells expressing proSP-C-L188Q results in a stable CTC-proSp-C-L188Q complex, increased proSP-C-L188Q half-life and reduced formation of Congo Red-positive deposits; (iii) replacement of the metastable polyvaline transmembrane segment with a stable polyleucine transmembrane segment likewise prevents formation of amyloid-like proSP-C-L188Q aggregates; and (iv) binding of recombinant CTC to non-helical SP-C blocks SP-C amyloid fibril fort-nation. These results suggest that CTC can prevent the polyvaline segment of proSP-C from promoting formation of amyloid-like deposits during biosynthesis, by binding to non-helical conformations. Mutations in the Brichos domain of proSP-C may lead to ILD via loss of CTC chaperone function.

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