| Literature DB >> 34884963 |
Alejandra Gonzalez-Duarte1, Alfredo Ulloa-Aguirre2.
Abstract
Transthyretin (TTR) amyloidogenesis involves the formation, aggregation, and deposition of amyloid fibrils from tetrameric TTR in different organs and tissues. While the result of amyloidoses is the accumulation of amyloid fibrils resulting in end-organ damage, the nature, and sequence of the molecular causes leading to amyloidosis may differ between the different variants. In addition, fibril accumulation and toxicity vary between different mutations. Structural changes in amyloidogenic TTR have been difficult to identify through X-ray crystallography; but nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has revealed different chemical shifts in the backbone structure of mutated and wild-type TTR, resulting in diverse responses to the cellular conditions or proteolytic stress. Toxic mechanisms of TTR amyloidosis have different effects on different tissues. Therapeutic approaches have evolved from orthotopic liver transplants to novel disease-modifying therapies that stabilize TTR tetramers and gene-silencing agents like small interfering RNA and antisense oligonucleotide therapies. The underlying molecular mechanisms of the different TTR variants could be responsible for the tropisms to specific organs, the age at onset, treatment responses, or disparities in the prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: ATTR variants; TTR amyloidosis; hereditary amyloidosis; oligomer toxicity; protein misfolding; wild-type amyloidosis
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34884963 PMCID: PMC8658192 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222313158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Transthyretin (TTR) conformational structures. TTR is a homotetrameric protein composed of four monomers of 127 amino acids each. Each monomer contains one small α-helix and eight β-strands (CBEF and DAGH) (a,b), which are arranged in a β-sandwich of two four-stranded β-sheets and one small α-helix found between β-strands E and F. TTR monomers interact via hydrogen bonds between the antiparallel, adjacent β-strands H-H’ and F-F’ to form a dimeric species (c). The two dimers (A-B and C-D) form the tetramer through hydrophobic contacts between the residues of the A and B, and G and H loops. The tetramer forms a central hydrophobic pocket (T4 channel) with two binding sites for hormones (red and blue ovals in (d)). (e) The TTR tetramer dissociates into dimers and lowest free-energy monomers more prone to form fibrils; mutant monomers misfold, aggregate, and subsequently form prefibrillar compounds and amyloid fibrils. In this scenario, tetramer dissociation into monomers is the rate-liming step of the aggregation reaction. Based on this model, several studies have focused on developing effective and selective therapeutic approaches (i.e., TTR ligands) aimed to prevent TTR dissociation and aggregation. (Model adapted from PDB code 1DVQ (https://pdbjbk1.pdbj.org/emnavi/quick.php?id=pdb-1dvq, (accessed on 5 October 2021)).
Mechanisms of amyloid formation or stabilization.
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Formation of a a-sheet structures after tetramer dissociation Formation and aggregation of monomers, dimers or oligomers Seeding and nucleation Exposure of β-strand G (highly amyloidogenic) Conformational changes to an aggregation- prone state DAGH β-sheet flexibility with perturbation in an aggregation-prone state. Mutations in F residues Proteolysis |
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Hydrogen-bond network Sidechain packing around the β-strands F and H β-strand H limits the exposure of the amyloidogenic β-strand G. |
More than 130 mutations of the TTR gene are known to be pathogenic. Consequently, different mechanisms for amyloid formation have been described, some directly related to the mutation. Some regions of the TTR molecule are important for maintaining the tetrameric quaternary structure of TTR.