| Literature DB >> 29089309 |
Cyrille Garnier1, Fatma Briki2, Brigitte Nedelec3, Patrick Le Pogamp4, Ahmet Dogan5,6, Nathalie Rioux-Leclercq7, Renan Goude8, Caroline Beugnet9, Laurent Martin10, Marc Delpech11, Frank Bridoux12, Gilles Grateau13, Jean Doucet2, Philippe Derreumaux14, Sophie Valleix3,9.
Abstract
The first case of hereditary fibrinogen Aα-chain amyloidosis was recognized >20 years ago, but disease mechanisms still remain unknown. Here we report detailed clinical and proteomics studies of a French kindred with a novel amyloidogenic fibrinogen Aα-chain frameshift variant, Phe521Leufs, causing a severe familial form of renal amyloidosis. Next, we focused our investigations to elucidate the molecular basis that render this Aα-chain variant amyloidogenic. We show that a 49-mer peptide derived from the C-terminal part of the Phe521Leufs chain is deposited as fibrils in the patient's kidneys, establishing that only a small portion of Phe521Leufs directly contributes to amyloid formation in vivo. In silico analysis indicated that this 49-mer Aα-chain peptide contained a motif (VLITL), with a high intrinsic propensity for β-aggregation at residues 44 to 48 of human renal fibrils. To experimentally verify the amyloid propensity of VLITL, we generated synthetic Phe521Leufs-derived peptides and compared their capacity for fibril formation in vitro with that of their VLITL-deleted counterparts. We show that VLITL forms typical amyloid fibrils in vitro and is a major signal for cross-β-sheet self-association of the 49-mer Phe521Leufs peptide identified in vivo, whereas its absence abrogates fibril formation. This study provides compelling evidence that VLITL confers amyloidogenic properties to Aα-chain frameshift variants, yielding a previously unknown molecular basis for the pathogenesis of Aα-chain amyloidosis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29089309 PMCID: PMC5843806 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-07-796185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113