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      Protein Aggregation and Fibrillogenesis in Cerebral and Systemic Amyloid Disease 

      Familial Amyloidotic Polyneuropathy and Transthyretin

      other
      Springer Netherlands

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          Inherent toxicity of aggregates implies a common mechanism for protein misfolding diseases.

          A range of human degenerative conditions, including Alzheimer's disease, light-chain amyloidosis and the spongiform encephalopathies, is associated with the deposition in tissue of proteinaceous aggregates known as amyloid fibrils or plaques. It has been shown previously that fibrillar aggregates that are closely similar to those associated with clinical amyloidoses can be formed in vitro from proteins not connected with these diseases, including the SH3 domain from bovine phosphatidyl-inositol-3'-kinase and the amino-terminal domain of the Escherichia coli HypF protein. Here we show that species formed early in the aggregation of these non-disease-associated proteins can be inherently highly cytotoxic. This finding provides added evidence that avoidance of protein aggregation is crucial for the preservation of biological function and suggests common features in the origins of this family of protein deposition diseases.
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            Receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE)-mediated neurite outgrowth and activation of NF-kappaB require the cytoplasmic domain of the receptor but different downstream signaling pathways.

            Receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) mediates neurite outgrowth in vitro on amphoterin-coated substrates. Ligation of RAGE by two other ligands, advanced glycation end products or amyloid beta-peptide, is suggested to play a role in cell injury mechanisms involving cellular oxidant stress and activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB. However, the RAGE signaling pathways in neurite outgrowth and cell injury are largely unknown. Here we show that transfection of RAGE to neuroblastoma cells induces extension of filopodia and neurites on amphoterin-coated substrates. Furthermore, ligation of RAGE in transfected cells enhances NF-kappaB-dependent transcription. Both the RAGE-mediated neurite outgrowth and activation of NF-kappaB are blocked by deletion of the cytoplasmic domain of RAGE. Moreover, dominant negative Rac and Cdc42 but not dominant negative Ras inhibit the extension of neurites induced by RAGE-amphoterin interaction. In contrast, the activation of NF-kappaB is inhibited by dominant negative Ras but not Rac or Cdc42. These data suggest that distinct signaling pathways are used by RAGE to induce neurite outgrowth and regulate gene expression through NF-kappaB.
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              The alternative conformations of amyloidogenic proteins and their multi-step assembly pathways.

              The conformational change hypothesis postulates that tertiary structural changes under partially denaturing conditions convert one of 17 normally soluble and functional human proteins into an alternative conformation that subsequently undergoes self-assembly into an amyloid fibril, the putative causative agent in amyloid disease. This hypothesis is consistent with Anfinsen's view that the tertiary structure of a protein is determined both by its sequence and the aqueous environment; the latter does not always favor the normally folded state. Unlike sickle cell hemoglobin assembly, where owing to a surface mutation, hemoglobin polymerizes in its normally folded conformation, amyloid proteins self-assemble as a result of the formation of an alternative tertiary structure-a conformational intermediate formed under partially denaturing conditions. The pathway by which an amyloidogenic protein assembles into amyloid fibrils appears to involve quaternary structural intermediates that assemble into increasingly complex quaternary structures, including amyloid protofilaments, which ultimately assemble into amyloid fibrils. Several recent studies have discussed the multi-step assembly pathway(s) characterizing amyloid fibril formation.
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                Book Chapter
                2012
                December 6 2012
                : 565-607
                10.1007/978-94-007-5416-4_21
                537339e6-60c1-4f9c-813b-8851dee2a029
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