Amyloid-like Fibril Formation in an All β-Barrel Protein Involves the Formation of Partially Structured Intermediate(s)

In the present study, we demonstrate the thermal induced amyloid formation in a β-barrel protein, such as the acidic fibroblast growth factor from Notopthalmus viridescens (nFGF-1). Fibril formation in nFGF-1 is observed to occur maximally at 65 °C. Electron microscope analysis of the thermal induce...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2002-05, Vol.277 (21), p.19027-19036
Hauptverfasser: Srisailam, Sampath, Wang, Han-Min, Kumar, Thallampuranam Krishnaswamy S., Rajalingam, Dakshinamurthy, Sivaraja, Vaithiyalingam, Sheu, Hwo-Shuenn, Chang, Yen-Chung, Yu, Chin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In the present study, we demonstrate the thermal induced amyloid formation in a β-barrel protein, such as the acidic fibroblast growth factor from Notopthalmus viridescens (nFGF-1). Fibril formation in nFGF-1 is observed to occur maximally at 65 °C. Electron microscope analysis of the thermal induced fibrils of nFGF-1 shows that they are filamentous with an average diameter of about 20 nm. X-ray diffraction analysis reveals that the thermal induced fibrils of nFGF-1 have a typical “cross-β” structure with the β-strands perpendicular to the fibril axis. By using a variety of biophysical techniques including multidimensional NMR, we demonstrate that fibril formation involves the formation of a partially structured intermediate(s) in the thermal unfolding pathway of the protein (nFGF-1). Results of the anilino-8-napthalene sulfonate binding experiments indicate that fibril formation occurs due to the coalescence of the protein (in the intermediate state(s)) through the solvent-exposed non-polar surface(s). In this study, we also demonstrate that organic osmolytes, such as proline, can efficiently prevent the thermal induced amyloid formation in nFGF-1. Proline is found to stabilize the native conformation of the protein. The addition, proline is observed to increase the cooperativity of the unfolding (native ↔ denatured) reaction and consequently decrease the population of the “sticky” thermal equilibrium intermediate(s) responsible for the fibril formation.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M110762200