4.6 Article

Analysis of amyloid-like secondary structure in the Cryab-R120G knock-in mouse model of hereditary cataracts by two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy

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PLOS ONE
卷 16, 期 9, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0257098

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  1. NIH [R01GM102387, 1R21AG061602]
  2. NSF through the University of Wisconsin Materials Research Science and Engineering Center [DMR-1720415]
  3. NIH from Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. [EY05681-33]

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Alpha B-crystallin is a small heat shock protein that can form aggregates in cataracts and Alzheimer's disease. The R120G mutation in this protein is associated with hereditary cataracts and myopathy, and studying the secondary structures of these aggregates is important for understanding disease mechanisms and developing treatments. The 2DIR spectroscopy study confirmed the presence of amyloid-like secondary structures in Cryab-R120G knock-in mice with cataracts, supporting the use of this model for studying age-related cataract disease.
alpha B-crystallin is a small heat shock protein that forms a heterooligomeric complex with alpha A-crystallin in the ocular lens. It is also widely distributed in tissues throughout the body and has been linked with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, where it is associated with amyloid fibrils. Crystallins can form amorphous aggregates in cataracts as well as more structured amyloid-like fibrils. The arginine 120 to glycine (R120G) mutation in alpha B-crystallin (Cryab-R120G) results in high molecular weight crystallin protein aggregates and loss of the chaperone activity of the protein in vitro, and it is associated with human hereditary cataracts and myopathy. Characterizing the amorphous (unstructured) versus the highly ordered (amyloid fibril) nature of crystallin aggregates is important in understanding their role in disease and important to developing pharmacological treatments for cataracts. We investigated protein secondary structure in wild-type (WT) and Cryab-R120G knock-in mutant mouse lenses using two-dimensional infrared (2DIR) spectroscopy, which has been used to detect amyloid-like fibrils in human lenses and measure UV radiation-induced changes in porcine lenses. Our goal was to compare the aggregated proteins in this mouse lens model to human lenses and evaluate the protein structural relevance of the Cryab-R120G knock-in mouse model to general age-related cataract disease. In the 2DIR spectra, amide I diagonal peak frequencies were red-shifted to smaller wavenumbers in mutant mouse lenses as compared to WT mouse lenses, consistent with an increase in ordered secondary structure. The cross peak frequency and intensity indicated the presence of amyloid in the mutant mouse lenses. While the diagonal and cross peak changes in location and intensity from the 2DIR spectra indicated significant structural differences between the wild type and mutant mouse lenses, these differences were smaller than those found in human lenses; thus, the Cryab-R120G knock-in mouse lenses contain less amyloid-like secondary structure than human lenses. The results of the 2DIR spectroscopy study confirm the presence of amyloid-like secondary structure in Cryab-R120G knock-in mice with cataracts and support the use of this model to study age-related cataract.

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