Literature DB >> 24099305

The BRICHOS domain, amyloid fibril formation, and their relationship.

Stefan D Knight1, Jenny Presto, Sara Linse, Jan Johansson.   

Abstract

Amyloid diseases are defined by tissue deposition of insoluble, fibrillar β-sheet polymers of specific proteins, but it appears that toxic oligomeric species rather than the fibrils are the main cause of tissue degeneration. Many proteins can form amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, but only ~30 proteins have been found to cause mammalian amyloid disease, suggesting that physiological mechanisms that protect against amyloid formation exist. The transmembrane region of lung surfactant protein C precursor (proSP-C) forms amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, and SP-C amyloid has been found in lung tissue from patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD). ProSP-C contains a BRICHOS domain, in which many ILD-associated mutations are localized, and the BRICHOS domain can prevent SP-C from forming amyloid-like fibrils. Recent data suggest that recombinant BRICHOS domains from proSP-C and Bri2 (associated with familial dementia and amyloid formation) interact with peptides with a strong propensity to form β-sheet structures, including amyloid β-peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. Such interactions efficiently delay formation of fibrils and oligomers. The BRICHOS domain is defined at the sequence level and is found in ~10 distantly related proprotein families. These have widely different or unknown functions, but several of the proteins are associated with human disease. Structural modeling of various BRICHOS domains, based on the X-ray structure of the proSP-C BRICHOS domain, identifies a conserved region that is structurally complementary to the β-sheet- and/or amyloid-prone regions in the BRICHOS domain-containing proproteins. These observations make the BRICHOS domain the first example of a chaperone-like domain with specificity for β-prone regions.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24099305     DOI: 10.1021/bi400908x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  28 in total

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Review 5.  Current and future treatment of amyloid diseases.

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9.  Blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal fluid passage of BRICHOS domains from two molecular chaperones in mice.

Authors:  Simone Tambaro; Lorena Galan-Acosta; Axel Leppert; Gefei Chen; Henrik Biverstål; Jenny Presto; Per Nilsson; Jan Johansson
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2018-12-31       Impact factor: 5.157

10.  A molecular chaperone breaks the catalytic cycle that generates toxic Aβ oligomers.

Authors:  Samuel I A Cohen; Paolo Arosio; Jenny Presto; Firoz Roshan Kurudenkandy; Henrik Biverstal; Lisa Dolfe; Christopher Dunning; Xiaoting Yang; Birgitta Frohm; Michele Vendruscolo; Jan Johansson; Christopher M Dobson; André Fisahn; Tuomas P J Knowles; Sara Linse
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2015-02-16       Impact factor: 15.369

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