Volume 61, Issue 3 pp. 579-589
Research Article

Poly-(L-alanine) expansions form core β-sheets that nucleate amyloid assembly

Leonid M. Shinchuk

Leonid M. Shinchuk

Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts

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Deepak Sharma

Deepak Sharma

Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts

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Sylvie E. Blondelle

Sylvie E. Blondelle

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies, San Diego, California

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Natalia Reixach

Natalia Reixach

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies, San Diego, California

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Hideyo Inouye

Hideyo Inouye

Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts

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Daniel A. Kirschner

Corresponding Author

Daniel A. Kirschner

Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts

Biology Department, Boston College, Higgins Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3811===Search for more papers by this author
First published: 19 August 2005
Citations: 77

Abstract

Expansion to a total of 11–17 sequential alanine residues from the normal number of 10 in the polyadenine-binding protein nuclear-1 (PABPN1) results in formation of intranuclear, fibrillar inclusions in skeletal muscle and hypothalamic neurons in adult-onset, dominantly inherited oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD). To understand the role that homopolymeric length may play in the protein misfolding that leads to the inclusions, we analyzed the self-assembly of synthetic poly-(L-alanine) peptides having 3–20 residues. We found that the conformational transition and structure of polyalanine (polyAla) assemblies in solution are not only length-dependent but also are determined by concentration, temperature, and incubation time. No β-sheet complex was detected for those peptides characterized by n < 8, where n is number of alanine residues. A second group of peptides with 7 < n < 15 showed varying levels of complex formation, while for those peptides having n > 15, the interconversion process from the monomeric to the β-sheet complex was complete under any of the tested experimental conditions. Unlike the typical tinctorial properties of amyloid fibrils, polyalanine fibrils did not show fluorescence with thioflavin T or apple-green birefringence with Congo red; however, like amyloid, X-ray diffraction showed that the peptide chains in these fibrils were oriented normal to the fibril axis (i.e., in the cross-β arrangement). Neighboring β-sheets are quarter-staggered in the hydrogen-bonding direction such that the alanine side-chains were closely packed in the intersheet space. Strong van der Waals contacts between side-chains in this arrangement likely account for the high stability of the macromolecular fibrillar complex in solution over a wide range of temperature (5–85°C), and pH (2–10.5), and its resistance to denaturant (< 8 M urea) and to proteases (protease K, trypsin). We postulate that a similar stabilization of an expanded polyalanine stretch could form a core β-sheet structure that mediates the intermolecular association of mutant proteins into fibrillar inclusions in human pathologies. Proteins 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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