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      PrP P102L and Nearby Lysine Mutations Promote Spontaneous In Vitro Formation of Transmissible Prions

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          ABSTRACT

          Accumulation of fibrillar protein aggregates is a hallmark of many diseases. While numerous proteins form fibrils by prion-like seeded polymerization in vitro, only some are transmissible and pathogenic in vivo. To probe the structural features that confer transmissibility to prion protein (PrP) fibrils, we have analyzed synthetic PrP amyloids with or without the human prion disease-associated P102L mutation. The formation of infectious prions from PrP molecules in vitro has required cofactors and/or unphysiological denaturing conditions. Here, we demonstrate that, under physiologically compatible conditions without cofactors, the P102L mutation in recombinant hamster PrP promoted prion formation when seeded by minute amounts of scrapie prions in vitro. Surprisingly, combination of the P102L mutation with charge-neutralizing substitutions of four nearby lysines promoted spontaneous prion formation. When inoculated into hamsters, both of these types of synthetic prions initiated substantial accumulation of prion seeding activity and protease-resistant PrP without transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) clinical signs or notable glial activation. Our evidence suggests that PrP's centrally located proline and lysine residues act as conformational switches in the in vitro formation of transmissible PrP amyloids.

          IMPORTANCE Many diseases involve the damaging accumulation of specific misfolded proteins in thread-like aggregates. These threads (fibrils) are capable of growing on the ends by seeding the refolding and incorporation of the normal form of the given protein. In many cases such aggregates can be infectious and propagate like prions when transmitted from one individual host to another. Some transmitted aggregates can cause fatal disease, as with human iatrogenic prion diseases, while other aggregates appear to be relatively innocuous. The factors that distinguish infectious and pathogenic protein aggregates from more innocuous ones are poorly understood. Here we have compared the combined effects of prion seeding and mutations of prion protein (PrP) on the structure and transmission properties of synthetic PrP aggregates. Our results highlight the influence of specific sequence features in the normally unstructured region of PrP that influence the infectious and neuropathogenic properties of PrP-derived aggregates.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Role: Editor
          Journal
          J Virol
          J. Virol
          jvi
          jvi
          JVI
          Journal of Virology
          American Society for Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
          0022-538X
          1098-5514
          23 August 2017
          13 October 2017
          1 November 2017
          : 91
          : 21
          : e01276-17
          Affiliations
          Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana, USA
          University of Maryland, College Park
          Author notes
          Address correspondence to Byron Caughey, bcaughey@ 123456nih.gov .

          Citation Kraus A, Raymond GJ, Race B, Campbell KJ, Hughson AG, Anson KJ, Raymond LD, Caughey B. 2017. PrP P102L and nearby lysine mutations promote spontaneous in vitro formation of transmissible prions. J Virol 91:e01276-17. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01276-17.

          Article
          PMC5640842 PMC5640842 5640842 01276-17
          10.1128/JVI.01276-17
          5640842
          28835493
          75efb20c-d342-4aa3-a8ae-9d2c0c45210b
          Copyright © 2017 American Society for Microbiology.

          All Rights Reserved.

          History
          : 26 July 2017
          : 14 August 2017
          Page count
          Figures: 7, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 53, Pages: 17, Words: 9510
          Funding
          Funded by: Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (DIR, NIAID) https://doi.org/10.13039/100006492
          Award ID: ZIA AI000580-27
          Categories
          Prions
          Custom metadata
          November 2017

          prion protein,prions,protein misfolding,transmissibility,proline,lysine,conformational switches,GSS,RT-QuIC

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