BRICHOS Domains Efficiently Delay Fibrillation of Amyloid beta-Peptide
(2012) In Journal of Biological Chemistry 287(37). p.31608-31617- Abstract
- Amyloid diseases such as Alzheimer, Parkinson, and prion diseases are associated with a specific form of protein mis-folding and aggregation into oligomers and fibrils rich in beta-sheet structure. The BRICHOS domain consisting of similar to 100 residues is found in membrane proteins associated with degenerative and proliferative disease, including lung fibrosis (surfactant protein C precursor; pro-SP-C) and familial dementia (Bri2). We find that recombinant BRICHOS domains from Bri2 and pro-SP-C prevent fibril formation of amyloid beta-peptides (A beta(40) and A beta(42)) far below the stoichiometric ratio. Kinetic experiments show that a main effect of BRICHOS is to prolong the lag time in a concentration-dependent, quantitative, and... (More)
- Amyloid diseases such as Alzheimer, Parkinson, and prion diseases are associated with a specific form of protein mis-folding and aggregation into oligomers and fibrils rich in beta-sheet structure. The BRICHOS domain consisting of similar to 100 residues is found in membrane proteins associated with degenerative and proliferative disease, including lung fibrosis (surfactant protein C precursor; pro-SP-C) and familial dementia (Bri2). We find that recombinant BRICHOS domains from Bri2 and pro-SP-C prevent fibril formation of amyloid beta-peptides (A beta(40) and A beta(42)) far below the stoichiometric ratio. Kinetic experiments show that a main effect of BRICHOS is to prolong the lag time in a concentration-dependent, quantitative, and reproducible manner. An ongoing aggregation process is retarded if BRICHOS is added at any time during the lag phase, but it is too late to interfere at the end of the process. Results from circular dichroism and NMR spectroscopy, as well as analytical size exclusion chromatography, imply that A beta is maintained as an unstructured monomer during the extended lag phase in the presence of BRICHOS. Electron microscopy shows that although the process is delayed, typical amyloid fibrils are eventually formed also when BRICHOS is present. Structural BRICHOS models display a conserved array of tyrosine rings on a five-stranded beta-sheet, with inter-hydroxyl distances suited for hydrogen-bonding peptides in an extended beta-conformation. Our data imply that the inhibitory mechanism is reliant on BRICHOS interfering with molecular events during the lag phase. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3191205
- author
- Willander, Hanna ; Presto, Jenny ; Askarieh, Glareh ; Biverstal, Henrik ; Frohm, Birgitta LU ; Knight, Stefan D. ; Johansson, Jan and Linse, Sara LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2012
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
- volume
- 287
- issue
- 37
- pages
- 31608 - 31617
- publisher
- American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000308791300072
- scopus:84866070823
- pmid:22801430
- ISSN
- 1083-351X
- DOI
- 10.1074/jbc.M112.393157
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- c02c9742-7705-4c21-81fd-f555f68d568c (old id 3191205)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 11:16:18
- date last changed
- 2022-04-20 18:18:53
@article{c02c9742-7705-4c21-81fd-f555f68d568c, abstract = {{Amyloid diseases such as Alzheimer, Parkinson, and prion diseases are associated with a specific form of protein mis-folding and aggregation into oligomers and fibrils rich in beta-sheet structure. The BRICHOS domain consisting of similar to 100 residues is found in membrane proteins associated with degenerative and proliferative disease, including lung fibrosis (surfactant protein C precursor; pro-SP-C) and familial dementia (Bri2). We find that recombinant BRICHOS domains from Bri2 and pro-SP-C prevent fibril formation of amyloid beta-peptides (A beta(40) and A beta(42)) far below the stoichiometric ratio. Kinetic experiments show that a main effect of BRICHOS is to prolong the lag time in a concentration-dependent, quantitative, and reproducible manner. An ongoing aggregation process is retarded if BRICHOS is added at any time during the lag phase, but it is too late to interfere at the end of the process. Results from circular dichroism and NMR spectroscopy, as well as analytical size exclusion chromatography, imply that A beta is maintained as an unstructured monomer during the extended lag phase in the presence of BRICHOS. Electron microscopy shows that although the process is delayed, typical amyloid fibrils are eventually formed also when BRICHOS is present. Structural BRICHOS models display a conserved array of tyrosine rings on a five-stranded beta-sheet, with inter-hydroxyl distances suited for hydrogen-bonding peptides in an extended beta-conformation. Our data imply that the inhibitory mechanism is reliant on BRICHOS interfering with molecular events during the lag phase.}}, author = {{Willander, Hanna and Presto, Jenny and Askarieh, Glareh and Biverstal, Henrik and Frohm, Birgitta and Knight, Stefan D. and Johansson, Jan and Linse, Sara}}, issn = {{1083-351X}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{37}}, pages = {{31608--31617}}, publisher = {{American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology}}, series = {{Journal of Biological Chemistry}}, title = {{BRICHOS Domains Efficiently Delay Fibrillation of Amyloid beta-Peptide}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.393157}}, doi = {{10.1074/jbc.M112.393157}}, volume = {{287}}, year = {{2012}}, }