| Literature DB >> 26234586 |
Nicole M Milkovic1, Jonathan Catazaro2, Jiusheng Lin1, Steven Halouska2, James L Kizziah1,3, Sara Basiaga2, Ronald L Cerny2, Robert Powers2, Mark A Wilson1.
Abstract
Various missense mutations in the cytoprotective protein DJ-1 cause rare forms of inherited parkinsonism. One mutation, M26I, diminishes DJ-1 protein levels in the cell but does not result in large changes in the three-dimensional structure or thermal stability of the protein. Therefore, the molecular defect that results in loss of M26I DJ-1 protective function is unclear. Using NMR spectroscopy near physiological temperature, we found that the picosecond-nanosecond dynamics of wild-type and M26I DJ-1 are similar. In contrast, elevated amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates indicate that M26I DJ-1 is more flexible than the wild-type protein on longer timescales and that hydrophobic regions of M26I DJ-1 are transiently exposed to solvent. Tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy and thiol crosslinking analyzed by mass spectrometry also demonstrate that M26I DJ-1 samples conformations that differ from the wild-type protein at 37°C. These transiently sampled conformations are unstable and cause M26I DJ-1 to aggregate in vitro at physiological temperature but not at lower temperatures. M26I DJ-1 aggregation is correlated with pathogenicity, as the structurally similar but non-pathogenic M26L mutation does not aggregate at 37°C. The onset of dynamically driven M26I DJ-1 instability at physiological temperature resolves conflicting literature reports about the behavior of this disease-associated mutant and illustrates the pitfalls of characterizing proteins exclusively at room temperature or below, as key aspects of their behavior may not be apparent.Entities:
Keywords: DJ-1; PARK7; Parkinson's disease; conformational dynamics; protein stability; thiol crosslinking
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26234586 PMCID: PMC4594666 DOI: 10.1002/pro.2762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Sci ISSN: 0961-8368 Impact factor: 6.725