Literature DB >> 31239355

The l-isoaspartate modification within protein fragments in the aging lens can promote protein aggregation.

Rebeccah A Warmack1, Harrison Shawa1, Kate Liu1, Katia Lopez1, Joseph A Loo1, Joseph Horwitz2, Steven G Clarke3.   

Abstract

Transparency in the lens is accomplished by the dense packing and short-range order interactions of the crystallin proteins in fiber cells lacking organelles. These features are accompanied by a lack of protein turnover, leaving lens proteins susceptible to a number of damaging modifications and aggregation. The loss of lens transparency is attributed in part to such aggregation during aging. Among the damaging post-translational modifications that accumulate in long-lived proteins, isomerization at aspartate residues has been shown to be extensive throughout the crystallins. In this study of the human lens, we localize the accumulation of l-isoaspartate within water-soluble protein extracts primarily to crystallin peptides in high-molecular weight aggregates and show with MS that these peptides are from a variety of crystallins. To investigate the consequences of aspartate isomerization, we investigated two αA crystallin peptides 52LFRTVLDSGISEVR65 and 89VQDDFVEIH98, identified within this study, with the l-isoaspartate modification introduced at Asp58 and Asp91, respectively. Importantly, whereas both peptides modestly increase protein precipitation, the native 52LFRTVLDSGISEVR65 peptide shows higher aggregation propensity. In contrast, the introduction of l-isoaspartate within a previously identified anti-chaperone peptide from water-insoluble aggregates, αA crystallin 66SDRDKFVIFL(isoAsp)VKHF80, results in enhanced amyloid formation in vitro The modification of this peptide also increases aggregation of the lens chaperone αB crystallin. These findings may represent multiple pathways within the lens wherein the isomerization of aspartate residues in crystallin peptides differentially results in peptides associating with water-soluble or water-insoluble aggregates. Here the eye lens serves as a model for the cleavage and modification of long-lived proteins within other aging tissues.
© 2019 Warmack et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  L-isoaspartate; aging; lens; post-translational modification (PTM); protein aggregation; protein degradation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31239355      PMCID: PMC6690693          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA119.009052

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  55 in total

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