| Literature DB >> 32538869 |
Tony Werner1, Istvan Horvath1, Pernilla Wittung-Stafshede1.
Abstract
It was recently shown (Sampson et al., Elife9, 2020) that an amyloidogenic protein, CsgA, present in E. coli biofilms in the gut can trigger Parkinson's disease in mice. This study emphasizes the possible role of the gut microbiome in modulation (and even initiation) of human neurodegenerative disorders, such as Parkinson's disease. As the CsgA protein was found to accelerate alpha-synuclein (the key amyloidogenic protein in Parkinson's disease) amyloid formation in vitro, this result suggests that also other amyloidogenic proteins from gut bacteria, and even from the diet (such as stable allergenic proteins), may be able to affect human protein conformations and thereby modulate amyloid-related diseases. In this review, we summarize what has been reported in terms of in vitro cross-reactivity studies between alpha-synuclein and other amyloidogenic human and non-human proteins. It becomes clear from the limited data that exist that there is a fine line between acceleration and inhibition, but that cross-reactivity is widespread, and it is more common for other proteins (among the studied cases) to accelerate alpha-synuclein amyloid formation than to block it. It is of high importance to expand investigations of cross-reactivity between amyloidogenic proteins to both reveal underlying mechanisms and links between human diseases, as well as to develop new treatments that may be based on an altered gut microbiome.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; alpha-synuclein; amyloid formation; cross-reactivity; food allergens; functional amyloids; microbiome; neurodegeneration
Year: 2020 PMID: 32538869 PMCID: PMC7458506 DOI: 10.3233/JPD-202085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 1877-7171 Impact factor: 5.568
Fig. 1A) Scheme of aS’s polypeptide with N-terminal (blue), NAC (yellow) and C-terminal (red) parts indicated as well as known disease-causing mutations (stars). B) Typical aggregation curve of aS as probed by ThT fluorescence (lag, growth and plateau phases indicated). C) AFM image of aS amyloid fibers. D) High-resolution structures (2N0A, 6A6B, 6FLT, 6CU7, and 6CU8; Table 1) of aS amyloid fiber cores.
High-resolution aS amyloid structures reported in PDB; from the first one (by solid-state NMR) published in 2016 and subsequent ones (by cryo-EM) until February 2020, along with comments in some cases. The first five structures are shown in Fig. 1D
| PDB file | Year | Reference | Comments |
| 2N0A | 2016 | [ | Solid state NMR |
| 6A6B | 2018 | [ | |
| 6FLT | 2018 | [ | |
| 6CU7 | 2018 | [ | Rod |
| 6CU8 | 2018 | [ | Twister |
| 6SSX | 2019 | [ | Polymorph 2A |
| 6SST | 2019 | [ | Polymorph 2B |
| 6OSL | 2019 | [ | 1–122, acetylated |
| 6OSM | 2019 | [ | 1–103, acetylated |
| 6OSJ | 2019 | [ | 1–140, acetylated |
| 6PEO | 2019 | [ | H50Q narrow fibril |
| 6PES | 2019 | [ | H50Q wide fibril |
| 6UFR | 2020 | [ | E46K |
| 6LRQ | 2020 | [ | A53T |
| 6XYQ | 2020 | Multiple system atrophy, type II-2 | |
| 6XYO | 2020 | Multiple system atrophy, type I | |
| 6XYP | 2020 | Multiple system atrophy, type II-1 |
Effects of human and non-human amyloidogenic proteins (in monomer and amyloid forms) on aS amyloid formation kinetics reaction in vitro
| Amyloidogenic protein | Effect on aS amyloid formation reaction | References | |
| In monomer form | In amyloid form | ||
| Human: | |||
| IAPP | Acceleration + coaggregation | Acceleration | [ |
| Pro-IAPP | Inhibition | Inhibition | [ |
| S100A9 | Acceleration | No effect | [ |
| Tau (K19, tau23) | Acceleration + coaggregation | Acceleration | [ |
| Amyloid-β (1–40, 1–42, 3–42) | Acceleration + coaggregation | Acceleration | [ |
| Non-human: | |||
| Parvalbumin | No effect | Inhibition | [ |
| CsgA | Acceleration | Acceleration | [ |
| FapC | Inhibition (when using less amyloidogenic variant) | No effect | [ |
| Insulin | – | Acceleration | [ |
| Lysozyme | – | Acceleration | [ |
| GroES | – | Acceleration | [ |
Fig. 2Illustration of the cross-reactivity results reported in Table 2, indicating the amyloidogenic proteins (as monomers or amyloids) that accelerate aS amyloid formation (bottom box) and the ones that reduce/block aS aggregation (top box).