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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of the Acidic C-Terminal Region Comprising Amino Acids 109−140 on α-Synuclein Aggregation in Vitro†

Wolfgang Hoyer, +3 more
- 26 Nov 2004 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 51, pp 16233-16242
TLDR
The effects of the C-terminus on aggregation cannot be rationalized merely by a contribution to the protein net charge, but rather suggest a specific role of aa109-140 in the regulation of aggregation, presumably involving formation of intramolecular contacts.
Abstract
The aggregation of alpha-synuclein, involved in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's disease, is enhanced in vitro by biogenic polyamines binding to the highly charged C-terminal region aa109-140. In this study, we investigated the influence of this region on the aggregation kinetics, monitored by thioflavin T binding and static light scattering, and morphology, assessed by electron microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, and turbidity, by comparing the effect of various solution conditions on the wild-type protein, the disease related mutants A53T and A30P, and two truncated variants, syn(1-108) and syn(1-124), lacking the complete or the C-terminal half of the polyamine binding site. In the presence of the intact C-terminus, aggregation was strongly retarded in physiological buffer. This inhibition of aggregation was overridden by (i) addition of spermine or MgCl(2) or lowering of pH, leading to strong charge shielding in the C-terminus or (ii) by truncation of aa125-140 or aa109-140. Addition of MgCl(2) or spermine or acidification were not effective in promoting aggregation of syn(1-108). The impact of the disease-related mutations on the aggregation kinetics was dependent on the solution conditions, with the aggregation propensity order A53T approximately wt > A30P at low ionic strength, but A53T > wt approximately A30P at high ionic strength, with exceedingly potent promotion of aggregation by the A53T mutation in the presence of spermine. In contrast to full-length alpha-synuclein aggregates, those formed from syn(1-108) did not exhibit a pronounced polymorphism. The effects of the C-terminus on aggregation cannot be rationalized merely by a contribution to the protein net charge, but rather suggest a specific role of aa109-140 in the regulation of aggregation, presumably involving formation of intramolecular contacts.

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Citations
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Dissertation

Pulling apart the intermolecular interactions of the Parkinson’s disease linked protein alpha synuclein

TL;DR: This thesis aimed to study the initial intermolecular events in αSyn self-assembly (dimerisation) on a single molecule scale and found that force-resistant structure forms in the dimeric species of αSyn and that this structure is dependent on the environmental conditions.

Genetic factors and analysis of protein misfolding in vivo

Mats Holmberg
TL;DR: This thesis identifies a protein called Modifier of aggregation 4 (MOAG-4), which strongly promotes the formation of these protein aggregates, but does not appear to act on other proteins that form aggregates in a more disordered fashion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Determinants of Fibrillation in a Viral Amyloidogenic Domain from Combined Biochemical and Biophysical Studies

TL;DR: The Nipah and Hendra viruses (NiV and HeV) are biosafety level 4 human pathogens classified within the Henipavirus genus of the Paramyxovirus family as discussed by the authors .
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Adaptation of nanoarrays for the study of α-synuclein aggregation: preliminary results

TL;DR: In this article, a modification of a microarray reader based on a conventional microscope was proposed to monitor the aggregation kinetics of the natively unfolded protein α-synuclein.
Dissertation

Unraveling the molecular mechanisms underlying alpha-synuclein oligomerization and cytotoxicity

TL;DR: It is found that the availability of the aSyn N-terminus modulates its shuttling into the nucleus, and the molecular chaperone HSP70 accelerates the entry of aSyn into the nuclear compartment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerated in vitro fibril formation by a mutant alpha-synuclein linked to early-onset Parkinson disease.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that at higher concentrations, Lewy body-like fibrils and discrete spherical assemblies are formed; most rapidly by A53T, suggesting mutation-induced acceleration of α-synuclein fibril formation may contribute to the early onset of familial PD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fibrils Formed in Vitro from α-Synuclein and Two Mutant Forms Linked to Parkinson's Disease are Typical Amyloid†

TL;DR: Fibrils generated in vitro from alpha-synuclein, wild-type and both mutant forms, are shown to possess very similar features that are characteristic of amyloid fibrils, including a wound and predominantly unbranched morphology, distinctive dye-binding properties, and antiparallel beta-sheet structure.
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