The BRICHOS Domain, Amyloid Fibril Formation, and Their Relationship
(2013) In Biochemistry 52(43). p.7523-7531- Abstract
- Amyloid diseases are defined by tissue deposition of insoluble, fibrillar beta-sheet polymers of specific proteins, but it appears that toxic oligomeric species rather than the fibrils are the main cause of tissue degeneration. Many proteins can form amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, but only similar to 30 proteins have been found to cause mammalian amyloid disease, suggesting that physiological mechanisms that protect against amyloid formation exist. The transmembrane region of lung surfactant protein C precursor (proSP-C) forms amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, and SP-C amyloid has been found in lung tissue from patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD). ProSP-C contains a BRICHOS domain, in which many ILD-associated mutations are... (More)
- Amyloid diseases are defined by tissue deposition of insoluble, fibrillar beta-sheet polymers of specific proteins, but it appears that toxic oligomeric species rather than the fibrils are the main cause of tissue degeneration. Many proteins can form amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, but only similar to 30 proteins have been found to cause mammalian amyloid disease, suggesting that physiological mechanisms that protect against amyloid formation exist. The transmembrane region of lung surfactant protein C precursor (proSP-C) forms amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, and SP-C amyloid has been found in lung tissue from patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD). ProSP-C contains a BRICHOS domain, in which many ILD-associated mutations are localized, and the BRICHOS domain can prevent SP-C from forming amyloid-like fibrils. Recent data suggest that recombinant BRICHOS domains from proSP-C and Bri2 (associated with familial dementia and amyloid formation) interact with peptides with a strong propensity to form beta-sheet structures, including amyloid beta-peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. Such interactions efficiently delay formation of fibrils and oligomers. The BRICHOS domain is defined at the sequence level and is found in similar to 10 distantly related proprotein families. These have widely different or unknown functions, but several of the proteins are associated with human disease. Structural modeling of various BRICHOS domains, based on the X-ray structure of the proSP-C BRICHOS domain, identifies a conserved region that is structurally complementary to the beta-sheet- and/or amyloid-prone regions in the BRICHOS domain-containing proproteins. These observations make the BRICHOS domain the first example of a chaperone-like domain with specificity for beta-prone regions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4205382
- author
- Knight, Stefan D. ; Presto, Jenny ; Linse, Sara LU and Johansson, Jan
- organization
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Biochemistry
- volume
- 52
- issue
- 43
- pages
- 7523 - 7531
- publisher
- The American Chemical Society (ACS)
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000326429300001
- scopus:84887039934
- pmid:24099305
- ISSN
- 0006-2960
- DOI
- 10.1021/bi400908x
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 8c6b4958-3ef8-4309-ac25-7815898adac8 (old id 4205382)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 10:16:59
- date last changed
- 2023-11-09 16:57:03
@article{8c6b4958-3ef8-4309-ac25-7815898adac8, abstract = {{Amyloid diseases are defined by tissue deposition of insoluble, fibrillar beta-sheet polymers of specific proteins, but it appears that toxic oligomeric species rather than the fibrils are the main cause of tissue degeneration. Many proteins can form amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, but only similar to 30 proteins have been found to cause mammalian amyloid disease, suggesting that physiological mechanisms that protect against amyloid formation exist. The transmembrane region of lung surfactant protein C precursor (proSP-C) forms amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, and SP-C amyloid has been found in lung tissue from patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD). ProSP-C contains a BRICHOS domain, in which many ILD-associated mutations are localized, and the BRICHOS domain can prevent SP-C from forming amyloid-like fibrils. Recent data suggest that recombinant BRICHOS domains from proSP-C and Bri2 (associated with familial dementia and amyloid formation) interact with peptides with a strong propensity to form beta-sheet structures, including amyloid beta-peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. Such interactions efficiently delay formation of fibrils and oligomers. The BRICHOS domain is defined at the sequence level and is found in similar to 10 distantly related proprotein families. These have widely different or unknown functions, but several of the proteins are associated with human disease. Structural modeling of various BRICHOS domains, based on the X-ray structure of the proSP-C BRICHOS domain, identifies a conserved region that is structurally complementary to the beta-sheet- and/or amyloid-prone regions in the BRICHOS domain-containing proproteins. These observations make the BRICHOS domain the first example of a chaperone-like domain with specificity for beta-prone regions.}}, author = {{Knight, Stefan D. and Presto, Jenny and Linse, Sara and Johansson, Jan}}, issn = {{0006-2960}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{43}}, pages = {{7523--7531}}, publisher = {{The American Chemical Society (ACS)}}, series = {{Biochemistry}}, title = {{The BRICHOS Domain, Amyloid Fibril Formation, and Their Relationship}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi400908x}}, doi = {{10.1021/bi400908x}}, volume = {{52}}, year = {{2013}}, }