Article
High Pressure Induces Scrapie-like Prion Protein Misfolding and Amyloid Fibril Formation†
Supported by GIS − prions (Ministery of Research), ATC − prions (INSERM), and Human Science Frontier Program (HSFP).
Université de Montpellier 2.
INSERM U431, IFR 122.
CRBM, CNRS-FRE 2593.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Reinhard Lange, EA3763, CC 105, Université de Montpellier 2, Place Eugène Bataillon, F-34095 Montpellier cédex 5, France. Tel: +33.467.14.33.85. E-mail: lange@montp.inserm.fr.
Abstract
Our understanding of conformational conversion of proteins in diseases is essential for any diagnostic and therapeutic approach. Although not fully understood, misfolding of the prion protein (PrP) is implicated in the pathogenesis of prion diseases. Despite several efforts to produce the pathologically misfolded conformation in vitro from a recombinant PrP, no positive result has yet been obtained. Within the “protein-only hypothesis”, the reason for this hindrance may be that the experimental conditions used did not allow selection of the pathway adopted in vivo resulting in conversion into the infectious form. Here, using a pressure perturbation approach, we show that recombinant PrP is converted to a novel misfolded conformer, which is prone to aggregate and ultimately form amyloid fibrils. A short incubation at high pressure (600 MPa) of the truncated form of hamster prion protein (SHaPrP90-231) resulted in the formation of pre-amyloid structures. The mostly globular aggregates were characterized by ThT and ANS binding, and by a β-sheet-rich secondary structure. After overnight incubation at 600 MPa, amyloid fibrils were formed. In contrast to pre-amyloid structures, they showed birefringency of polarized light after Congo red staining and a strongly decreased ANS binding capacity, but enhanced ThT binding. Both aggregate types were resistant to digestion by PK, and can be considered as potential scrapie-like forms or precursors. These results may be useful for the search for compounds preventing pathogenic PrP misfolding and aggregation.
View: Full Text HTML | Hi-Res PDF
Tools
-
Add to Favorites
-
Download Citation
-
Email a Colleague -
Permalink
Order Reprints
Rights & Permissions
Citation Alerts
History
- Published In Issue June 08, 2004
- Received January 8, 2004
Revised Manuscript Received March 24, 2004
Cart



