4.4 Article

Methionine sulfoxides on PrPSc:: A prion-specific covalent signature

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 47, Issue 34, Pages 8866-8873

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi800801f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EU [FOOD-CT-2004-506579]
  2. MEC [SAF2006-0418]
  3. Horowitz Foundation

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Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders believed to be transmitted by PrP(Sc), an aberrant form of the membrane protein PrP(C). In the absence of an established form-specific covalent difference, the infectious properties of PrP(Sc) were uniquely ascribed to the self-perpetuation properties of its aberrant fold. Previous sequencing of the PrP chain isolated from PrP(27-30) showed the oxidation of some methionine residues; however, at that time, these findings were ascribed to experimental limitations. Using the unique recognition properties of alpha PrP mAb IPC2, protein chemistry, and state of the art mass spectrometry, we now show that while a large fraction of the methionine residues in brain PrP(Sc) are present as methionine sulfoxides this modification could not be found on brain PrP(C) as well as on its recombinant models. In particular, the pattern of oxidation of M213 with respect to the glycosylation at N181 of PrP(Sc) differs both within and between species, adding another diversity factor to the structure of PrP(Sc): molecules. Our results pave the way for the production of prion-specific reagents in the form of antibodies against oxidized PrP chains which can serve in the development of both diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. In addition, we hypothesize that the accumulation of PrP(Sc) and thereafter the pathogenesis of prion disease may result from the poor degradation of oxidized aberrantly folded PrP.

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