Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.

Formation of large protein fibrils with a characteristic cross β-sheet architecture is the key indicator for a wide variety of systemic and neurodegenerative amyloid diseases. Recent experiments have strongly implicated oligomeric intermediates, transiently formed during fibril assembly, as critical...

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Main Authors: Shannon E Hill, Tatiana Miti, Tyson Richmond, Martin Muschol
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3071722?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d6c0e1db994247a9a5b866c63d3cd2c32020-11-25T01:28:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0164e1817110.1371/journal.pone.0018171Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.Shannon E HillTatiana MitiTyson RichmondMartin MuscholFormation of large protein fibrils with a characteristic cross β-sheet architecture is the key indicator for a wide variety of systemic and neurodegenerative amyloid diseases. Recent experiments have strongly implicated oligomeric intermediates, transiently formed during fibril assembly, as critical contributors to cellular toxicity in amyloid diseases. At the same time, amyloid fibril assembly can proceed along different assembly pathways that might or might not involve such oligomeric intermediates. Elucidating the mechanisms that determine whether fibril formation proceeds along non-oligomeric or oligomeric pathways, therefore, is important not just for understanding amyloid fibril assembly at the molecular level but also for developing new targets for intervening with fibril formation. We have investigated fibril formation by hen egg white lysozyme, an enzyme for which human variants underlie non-neuropathic amyloidosis. Using a combination of static and dynamic light scattering, atomic force microscopy and circular dichroism, we find that amyloidogenic lysozyme monomers switch between three different assembly pathways: from monomeric to oligomeric fibril assembly and, eventually, disordered precipitation as the ionic strength of the solution increases. Fibril assembly only occurred under conditions of net repulsion among the amyloidogenic monomers while net attraction caused precipitation. The transition from monomeric to oligomeric fibril assembly, in turn, occurred as salt-mediated charge screening reduced repulsion among individual charged residues on the same monomer. We suggest a model of amyloid fibril formation in which repulsive charge interactions are a prerequisite for ordered fibril assembly. Furthermore, the spatial extent of non-specific charge screening selects between monomeric and oligomeric assembly pathways by affecting which subset of denatured states can form suitable intermolecular bonds and by altering the energetic and entropic requirements for the initial intermediates emerging along the monomeric vs. oligomeric assembly path.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3071722?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon E Hill
Tatiana Miti
Tyson Richmond
Martin Muschol
spellingShingle Shannon E Hill
Tatiana Miti
Tyson Richmond
Martin Muschol
Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Shannon E Hill
Tatiana Miti
Tyson Richmond
Martin Muschol
author_sort Shannon E Hill
title Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
title_short Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
title_full Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
title_fullStr Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
title_full_unstemmed Spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
title_sort spatial extent of charge repulsion regulates assembly pathways for lysozyme amyloid fibrils.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Formation of large protein fibrils with a characteristic cross β-sheet architecture is the key indicator for a wide variety of systemic and neurodegenerative amyloid diseases. Recent experiments have strongly implicated oligomeric intermediates, transiently formed during fibril assembly, as critical contributors to cellular toxicity in amyloid diseases. At the same time, amyloid fibril assembly can proceed along different assembly pathways that might or might not involve such oligomeric intermediates. Elucidating the mechanisms that determine whether fibril formation proceeds along non-oligomeric or oligomeric pathways, therefore, is important not just for understanding amyloid fibril assembly at the molecular level but also for developing new targets for intervening with fibril formation. We have investigated fibril formation by hen egg white lysozyme, an enzyme for which human variants underlie non-neuropathic amyloidosis. Using a combination of static and dynamic light scattering, atomic force microscopy and circular dichroism, we find that amyloidogenic lysozyme monomers switch between three different assembly pathways: from monomeric to oligomeric fibril assembly and, eventually, disordered precipitation as the ionic strength of the solution increases. Fibril assembly only occurred under conditions of net repulsion among the amyloidogenic monomers while net attraction caused precipitation. The transition from monomeric to oligomeric fibril assembly, in turn, occurred as salt-mediated charge screening reduced repulsion among individual charged residues on the same monomer. We suggest a model of amyloid fibril formation in which repulsive charge interactions are a prerequisite for ordered fibril assembly. Furthermore, the spatial extent of non-specific charge screening selects between monomeric and oligomeric assembly pathways by affecting which subset of denatured states can form suitable intermolecular bonds and by altering the energetic and entropic requirements for the initial intermediates emerging along the monomeric vs. oligomeric assembly path.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3071722?pdf=render
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