Literature DB >> 19321423

Folding kinetics of the human prion protein probed by temperature jump.

Tanya Hart1, Laszlo L P Hosszu, Clare R Trevitt, Graham S Jackson, Jonathan P Waltho, John Collinge, Anthony R Clarke.   

Abstract

Temperature-jump perturbation was used to examine the relaxation kinetics of folding of the human prion protein. Measured rates were very fast (approximately 3,000 s(-1)), with the extrapolated folding rate constant at approximately 20 degrees C in physiological conditions reaching 20,000 s(-1). By a mutational analysis of core residues, we found that only 2, on the interface of helices 2 and 3, have significant phi-values in the transition state. Interestingly, a mutation sandwiched between the above 2 residues on the helix-helix contact interface had very little effect on the overall free energy of folding but led to the formation of a monomeric misfolded state, which had to unfold to acquire the native PrP(C) conformation. Another mutation that led to a marked destabilization of the native fold also formed a misfolded intermediate, but this was aggregation-prone despite the native state of this mutant being soluble. Taken together, the data imply that this fast-folding protein has a transition state that is not compact (m value analysis gives a beta(t) value of only 0.3) but contains a developing nucleus between helices 2 and 3. The fact that a mutation in this nucleus had a negligible effect on stability but still led to formation of aberrant conformations during folding implies an easily perturbed folding mechanism. It is notable that in inherited forms of human prion disease, where point mutations produce a lethal dominant condition, 20 of the 33 amino acid replacements occur in the helix-2/3 sequence.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19321423      PMCID: PMC2667024          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0811457106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  24 in total

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6.  Structural mobility of the human prion protein probed by backbone hydrogen exchange.

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Authors:  J Collinge
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  21 in total

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7.  Impact of methionine oxidation as an initial event on the pathway of human prion protein conversion.

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8.  Single-molecule approaches to prion protein misfolding.

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9.  Oxidation of Helix-3 methionines precedes the formation of PK resistant PrP.

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10.  A Native-like Intermediate Serves as a Branching Point between the Folding and Aggregation Pathways of the Mouse Prion Protein.

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