Article
NMR Solution Structure of the Peptide Fragment 1−30, Derived from Unprocessed Mouse Doppel Protein, in DHPC Micelles†
This work was supported by grants from the Greek State Scholarships Foundation (I. K. Y.), the Swedish Research Council (Contracts 521-2002-6051 and 621-2004-3328), the European Commission (Contracts HPRN-CT-2001-00242 and QLK3-CT-2002-01989) and the National Institutes of Health (Contract AG21601).
Stockholm University.
The Scripps Research Institute.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: astrid@dbb.su.se. Tel: +46 8 162450. Fax: +46 8 155597.
Abstract

The downstream prion-like Doppel (Dpl) protein is a homologue related to the prion protein (PrP). Dpl is expressed in the brains of mice that do not express PrP, and Dpl is known to be toxic to neurons. One mode of toxicity has been suggested to involve direct membrane interactions. PrP under certain conditions of cell trafficking retains an uncleaved signal peptide, which may also hold for the much less studied Dpl. For a peptide with a sequence derived from the N-terminal part (1−30) of mouse Dpl (mDpl(1−30)) CD spectroscopy shows about 40% α-helical structure in DHPC and SDS micelles. In aqueous solution it is mostly a random coil. The three-dimensional solution structure was determined by NMR for mDpl(1−30) associated with DHPC micelles. 2D 1H NMR spectra of the peptide in q = 0.25 DMPC/DHPC bicelles only showed signals from the unstructured termini, indicating that the structured part of the peptide resides within the lipid bilayer. Together with 2H2O exchange data in the DHPC micelle solvent, these results show an α-helix protected from solvent exchange between residues 7 and 19, and suggest that the α-helical segment can adopt a transmembrane localization also in a membrane. Leakage studies with entrapped calcein in large unilamellar phospholipid vesicles showed that the peptide is almost as membrane perturbing as melittin, known to form pores in membranes. The results suggest a possible channel formation mechanism for the unprocessed Dpl protein, which may be related to toxicity through direct cell membrane interaction and damage.
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History
- Published In Issue January 10, 2006
- Received July 8, 2005
Revised Manuscript Received October 19, 2005
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