Identification and structural characterization of the precursor conformation of the prion protein which directly initiates misfolding and oligomerization ☆

July 28, 2017

Title

Identification and structural characterization of the precursor conformation of the prion protein which directly initiates misfolding and oligomerization ☆

Author

Roumita Moulick, Jayant B. Udgaonkar

Year

2017

Journal

Journal of Molecular Biology

Abstract

To identify and structurally characterize the precursor conformation of the prion protein (PrP), from which misfolding and aggregation directly commence, has been a long-standing goal. Misfolding converts the α-helical, non-pathogenic functional form of PrP to pathogenic, β-structured oligomeric and amyloidogenic forms, which are the cause of prion diseases. Susceptibility to sporadic prion disease correlates well with the propensity of PrP to misfold to cytotoxic, proteinase-K resistant oligomeric conformations, at low pH. In this study, mutagenesis at the hydrophobic core of the mouse prion protein has been shown to stabilize a monomeric, unfolding intermediate (I), which is populated significantly at equilibrium at low pH. Importantly, the rate of formation of β-structured oligomers at low pH is found to correlate well with the extent to which this intermediate is populated. The misfolding process is limited by dimerization of I, indicating that I is the monomeric precursor conformation which directly initiates misfolding. Structural and thermodynamic characterization by native state hydrogen-deuterium exchange-mass spectrometry studies indicate that the precursor conformation is a partially unfolded form of PrP which forms under misfolding-prone solvent conditions.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Protein denaturation, Chemical stability, Thermodynamics, Aggregation, Biochemistry