| Literature DB >> 28937634 |
Létitia Jean1, Alex C Foley2, David J T Vaux3.
Abstract
Hydrogels are water-swollen and viscoelastic three-dimensional cross-linked polymeric network originating from monomer polymerisation. Hydrogel-forming polypeptides are widely found in nature and, at a cellular and organismal level, they provide a wide range of functions for the organism making them. Amyloid structures, arising from polypeptide aggregation, can be damaging or beneficial to different types of organisms. Although the best-known amyloids are those associated with human pathologies, this underlying structure is commonly used by higher eukaryotes to maintain normal cellular activities, and also by microbial communities to promote their survival and growth. Amyloidogenesis occurs by nucleation-dependent polymerisation, which includes several species (monomers, nuclei, oligomers, and fibrils). Oligomers of pathological amyloids are considered the toxic species through cellular membrane perturbation, with the fibrils thought to represent a protective sink for toxic species. However, both functional and disease-associated amyloids use fibril cross-linking to form hydrogels. The properties of amyloid hydrogels can be exploited by organisms to fulfil specific physiological functions. Non-physiological hydrogelation by pathological amyloids may provide additional toxic mechanism(s), outside of membrane toxicity by oligomers, such as physical changes to the intracellular and extracellular environments, with wide-spread consequences for many structural and dynamic processes, and overall effects on cell survival.Entities:
Keywords: amyloid; hydrogel; pathology; physiology
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28937634 PMCID: PMC5745453 DOI: 10.3390/biom7040070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1From monomer to hydrogel. (a) Formation of amyloid fibrils. Amyloidogenesis is a nucleation-dependent polymerisation process, which shows a typical sigmoidal behaviour. When followed over time, fibril formation can classically be divided into three phases: nucleation typically characterised by a lag phase, elongation and a plateau. During nucleation, monomers (either unfolded or folded) have to undergo a conformational change to adopt an aggregation prone β-sheet conformation. Then aggregation-prone monomers have to come together in the right conformation and orientation, in an energetically unfavourable step, to form the minimal stable assembly, the nucleus. Once formed, the nucleus serves as a structural template for cooperative elongation. The assembly process becomes energetically favourable and proceeds through addition of aggregation-prone monomers onto the nucleus during elongation to form assembly intermediates or oligomers. Morphologically, by transmission electron microscopy, these oligomers appear as spherical structures (doughnut-like of 10–20 nm diameter) or small rods/protofibrils of various length (~20 to 70 nm). Oligomers carry on growing at the expense of monomers until the monomer concentration falls to the critical fibrillar concentration (the minimum monomer concentration required to form fibrils) and then fibril extension ceases (plateau phase). Typically, by transmission electron microscopy, fibrils can be several μm long with a width of 10 to 20 nm; (b) Formation of a 3D supramolecular fibrillar network. Beyond fibril formation, amyloid fibrils can interact with one another through a range of non-covalent and non-specific interactions to first form a fibrillar meshwork. By transmission electron microscopy, several μm long fibrils are seen to mostly laterally pack together, as well as twisting around one another. This fibrillar meshwork then proceeds, through further fibrillar interactions and entanglements, to form a 3D supramolecular fibrillar network. By scanning electron microscopy, the 3D network comprises fibril bundles as well as supramolecular networks of condensed amyloid fibrils. In an aqueous environment, this 3D supramolecular fibrillar network would be water-filled and act as the basis for hydrogel formation. This water-filled network has pore size defined by the fibrillar species and cross-linkers if present (see holes in between the schematic entangled β-sheets or within the condensed fibril in the scanning electron microscopy).
Figure 2Cellular hydrogels. Hydrogel-forming polypeptides can be found either within the eukaryotic cell (e.g., membrane-less organelles such as the nucleolus and stress granules, the central channel of the nuclear pore complexes (NPC), and the cytoskeleton) or in the extracellular space (extracellular matrix (ECM)). Hydrogel-forming polypeptides provide a wide range of functions for eukaryotic cells: selective diffusion barriers (ECM and NPC), compartmentalisation (nucleolus and stress granules), physical integrity (NPC, ECM and cytoskeleton), and motility (ECM and cytoskeleton). Some cellular hydrogels are formed by ‘functional’ amyloid-forming polypeptides (e.g., the central channel of the NPC and stress granules), but others (nucleolus, ECM and cytoskeleton) derive from non-amyloid polypeptides. For each cellular hydrogel, the hydrogel-forming polypeptide, cross-linkers and any other molecules involved in hydrogelation are depicted. Molecules that are involved in triggering polymerisation and/or polymerisation control, but not in hydrogelation, have been omitted. At the centre of the figure is a schematic of a typical eukaryotic cell, showing organelles and vesicular transport (green circles, containing proteins as green ‘lines’) between organelles of the endomembrane system: endoplasmic reticulum (light blue), Golgi apparatus (green), endosome (grey), lysosome (grey) and plasma membrane. Molecules present at the plasma membrane are also depicted: proteins (red ‘lines’) and glycoproteins (red lines with circles); proteoglycans (purple circles); receptors (light orange), their ligands (dark orange triangles) and downstream effectors (green rectangle); and transmembrane channel (blue) with molecules able to cross through it (blue circles). The ECM (top left inset) comprises proteoglycans and fibrous proteins such as collagen (red ‘tubes’), with the precise composition and organisation varying between tissue types. Collagen provides a structural framework for the ECM. Other proteins, such as fibronectin (orange) and laminin (blue), cross-link the ECM itself, but also the ECM to cells (via integrins, blue), and the ECM to soluble molecules. Proteoglycans (black fibrils with purple glycans) form the hydrogel, in which collagen and cross-linkers are embedded. NPC (top right inset) are spanning the nuclear envelope and formed from different protein types: filaments and rings (blue and green) forming the cytoplasmic and nucleoplasmic sides, and nucleoporins (purple, orange and pink) spanning the envelope. NPC selectively gate transport between the cytoplasm and nucleoplasm, which is mediated by a subclass of nucleoporins containing multiple Phenylalanine-Glycine (FG) repeats (FG-Nups). FG-Nups form an extended meshwork of fibrils (black filaments) lining the central channel and proposed to form a hydrogel with selective permeability. Stress granules (middle left inset) are membrane-less organelles accumulating during translational response to stress. They contain mRNA (black), translation machinery (e.g., ribosomes, grey) and RNA-binding proteins (RBPs; blue and green ovals). RBPs, through their prion-like domains, promote reversible aggregation, liquid-liquid phase separation followed by hydrogelation, which triggers formation of mature stress granules. The nucleolus (middle right inset) is also a membrane-less organelle maintained by aggregation, phase separation and hydrogelation. It is organised into three ‘compartments’: the granular portion (ribosome precursors, red), the fibrillar centre (RNA fibrils, blue) and the dense fibrillar portion (chromatin, black). The bottom third of the figure represents two types of cells (fibroblast and neuron), with different types of cytoskeleton organisation detailed (actin, purple, and microtubule, red). Cytoskeleton filaments form hydrogels cross-linked by a range of cytoskeleton-binding proteins. Just beneath the plasma membrane of some resting cells there is a cortex rich in actin. In eukaryotic cells, environment sensing and motility are mostly achieved through two types of protrusions, lamellipodium and filipodia, both formed via actin polymerisation generating treadmilling and driving directional movement at the cell leading edge. In lamellipodium (bottom left penultimate inset), actin polymerisation forms a dense network running in a crisscross fashion at angles of ~70°, crosslinked together by filamin (not shown). Directional migration is initiated by extracellular cues such as ECM proteins (e.g., collagen, orange filament). Protrusions are stabilised by adhesions linking the actin cytoskeleton to the underlying ECM proteins. In focal adhesions, integrins (heterodimeric receptor, blue) span the membrane and interact with the ECM substrate and, via actin-binding proteins (α-actinin, green, vinculin, red, and talin, purple), with intracellular actin. Filopodia are long thin protrusions composed of parallel polymerised actin bundles held together by a variety of proteins (e.g., fascin, blue) (bottom left inset). Attachment to the ECM substrate is followed by a contraction phase, detachment at the cell rear and retraction. Retraction requires a motor protein, myosin II (green), found in actomyosin stress fibers, crosslinked by α-actinin (red) (bottom right penultimate inset). Activation of the myosin motor leads to shortening of the filaments and subsequent cellular movements, but also promotes disassembly of adhesions at the cell rear. Microtubules radiate from the microtubule organising centre (MTOC) and are involved in moving and redistributing components of the cell. In neurons, reversible microtubule polymerisation in bundle is controlled by tau (blue semi-circle) binding (bottom right inset).
Figure 3Consequences of hydrogelation by pathological amyloid-forming polypeptides on normal cellular functions. (a) Permanent cargo sequestration (top panels) and decrease of RNA-binding protein (RBP)-dependent translation of mRNA (bottom panels). In normal physiology, cargos are transiently sequestered within granules due to reversible hydrogelation, and are released from them by gel melting (left top panel). In neurons, neuronal granules trap, via RBPs, mRNA encoding proteins in close proximity to synapses (bottom left panel). In the disease state, pathological amyloid-forming polypeptides, such as fused in sarcoma (FUS), can permanently trap cargo (e.g., RBPs) by forming an irreversible hydrogel (right top panel). This permanent cargo trapping can affect granule function in several ways. One example would be a decrease in RBP-dependent new translation of mRNA in dendrites and axon terminals (right bottom panel); (b) Changes in cell physical integrity (top panels) and motility (bottom panels). In normal physiology, the ECM provides cells with physical integrity (top left panel), but also participates in cell motility by linkage with the intracellular actin cytoskeleton (bottom left panel). It has been shown that pathological amyloids can affect ECM composition and properties, and can bind to ECM constituents. This would affect ECM hydrogel stiffness and would result in changes in the cell physical integrity by applying mechanical stress (top right panel). Disease-triggered changes in ECM hydrogel stiffness would also affect cell motility and migration in different ways (bottom right panel): loss of cellular adhesion, changes in rate and direction of cell migration. An inter-relationship between pathological amyloids and the actin cytoskeleton has also been shown. Formation and deposition of additional hydrogels by amyloid polypeptides in the intracellular space may thus alter the actin hydrogel (e.g., flexibility, actin turn-over, actomyosin contractility). This could lead to loss of cellular extensions triggered in different ways: contraction of the actin cytoskeleton (e.g., by increased stiffness), and actin filament depolymerisation (e.g., by a slower diffusion of actin monomers to growing filament ends); (c) Changes in molecular transport. In normal physiology, molecules are transported within the cell (vesicular transport within the endomembrane system), outside of the cell (vesicles), or taken up by the cell via receptors or channels (left panel). In the disease state, non-natural hydrogels could affect, or even impede, molecular transport in a variety of way: interaction between solutes and fibrils within the hydrogel, reduction of diffusion rates, trapping of molecules bigger than the pore size, and overall by decreasing bulk flow. This would affect the uptake of nutrients and essential molecules, secretion of molecules, intracellular trafficking, vesicle content might be released in the wrong place, movement of signalling molecules between cells, and movement of organelles (right panels). Sites where native hydrogels are absent or have very different properties would be the most affected; (d) Regulation of non-pathological gelators. In neuron normal physiology, translation of mRNAs relies on RBP-dependent RNA transport in neuronal granules to the synapse (left panel). Tau was proposed to slow RNA granule transport to the synapse, and therefore to be involved in translational stress response, due to its interaction with RBP T cell intracellular antigen 1 (TIA1). Tau, as a microtubule regulator, could also play a role in the cytomatrix hydrogelation. Thus, amyloids like tau, when in a monomeric state, can be involved in regulation of non-pathological gelators. In the disease state, as soon as amyloid-forming polypeptides start aggregating and gelling, their role in regulating hydrogelation of other components might be affected or abolished (right panel).