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      Immunoglobulin light chain amyloid aggregation

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          Abstract

          Light chain (AL) amyloidosis is a devastating, complex, and incurable protein misfolding disease.

          Abstract

          Light chain (AL) amyloidosis is a devastating, complex, and incurable protein misfolding disease. It is characterized by an abnormal proliferation of plasma cells (fully differentiated B cells) producing an excess of monoclonal immunoglobulin light chains that are secreted into circulation, where the light chains misfold, aggregate as amyloid fibrils in target organs, and cause organ dysfunction, organ failure, and death. In this article, we will review the factors that contribute to AL amyloidosis complexity, the findings by our laboratory from the last 16 years and the work from other laboratories on understanding the structural, kinetics, and thermodynamic contributions that drive immunoglobulin light chain-associated amyloidosis. We will discuss the role of cofactors and the mechanism of cellular damage. Last, we will review our recent findings on the high resolution structure of AL amyloid fibrils. AL amyloidosis is the best example of protein sequence diversity in misfolding diseases, as each patient has a unique combination of germline donor sequences and multiple amino acid mutations in the protein that forms the amyloid fibril.

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          Most cited references106

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          Amyloid formation by globular proteins under native conditions.

          The conversion of proteins from their soluble states into well-organized fibrillar aggregates is associated with a wide range of pathological conditions, including neurodegenerative diseases and systemic amyloidoses. In this review, we discuss the mechanism of aggregation of globular proteins under conditions in which they are initially folded. Although a conformational change of the native state is generally necessary to initiate aggregation, we show that a transition across the major energy barrier for unfolding is not essential and that aggregation may well be initiated from locally unfolded states that become accessible, for example, via thermal fluctuations occurring under physiological conditions. We review recent evidence on this topic and discuss its significance for understanding the onset and potential inhibition of protein aggregation in the context of diseases.
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            Natural beta-sheet proteins use negative design to avoid edge-to-edge aggregation.

            The fact that natural beta-sheet proteins are usually soluble but that fragments or designs of beta structure usually aggregate suggests that natural beta proteins must somehow be designed to avoid this problem. Regular beta-sheet edges are dangerous, because they are already in the right conformation to interact with any other beta strand they encounter. We surveyed edge strands in a large sample of all-beta proteins to tabulate features that could protect against further beta-sheet interactions. beta-barrels, of course, avoid edges altogether by continuous H-bonding around the barrel cylinder. Parallel beta-helix proteins protect their beta-sheet ends by covering them with loops of other structure. beta-propeller and single-sheet proteins use a combination of beta-bulges, prolines, strategically placed charges, very short edge strands, and loop coverage. beta-sandwich proteins favor placing an inward-pointing charged side chain on one of the edge strands where it would be buried by dimerization; they also use bulges, prolines, and other mechanisms. One recent beta-hairpin design has a constrained twist too great for accommodation into a larger beta-sheet, whereas some beta-sheet edges are protected by the bend and reverse twist produced by an Lbeta glycine. All free edge strands were seen to be protected, usually by several redundant mechanisms. In contrast, edge strands that natively form beta H-bonded dimers or rings have long, regular stretches without such protection. These results are relevant to understanding how proteins may assemble into beta-sheet amyloid fibers, and they are especially applicable to the de novo design of beta structure. Many edge-protection strategies used by natural proteins are beyond our current abilities to constrain by design, but one possibility stands out as especially useful: a single charged side chain near the middle of what would ordinarily be the hydrophobic side of the edge beta strand. This minimal negative-design strategy changes only one residue, requires no backbone distortion, and is easy to design. The accompanying paper [Wang, W. & Hecht, M. H. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99, 2760-2765] makes use of the inward-pointing charge strategy with great success, turning highly aggregated beta-sandwich designs into soluble monomers.
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              The role of exosomes in the processing of proteins associated with neurodegenerative diseases.

              Exosomes are small membranous vesicles secreted by a number of cell types and can be isolated from conditioned cell media or bodily fluids such as urine and plasma. Exosome biogenesis involves the inward budding of multivesicular bodies (MVB) to form intraluminal vesicles (ILV). When fused with the plasma membrane, the MVB releases the vesicles into the extracellular environment as exosomes. Proposed functions of these vesicles include roles in cell-cell signalling, removal of unwanted proteins, and the transfer of pathogens between cells, such as HIV-1. Another such pathogen which exploits this pathway is the prion, the infectious particle responsible for the transmissible neurodegenerative diseases such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) of humans or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) of cattle. Interestingly, this work is mirrored by studies on another protein involved in neurodegenerative disease, the amyloid precursor protein (APP) which is associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent work has found APP proteolytic fragments in association with exosomes, suggesting a common pathway previously unknown for proteins associated with neurodegenerative diseases. This review will be discussing the current literature regarding the role of exosomes in secretion of the proteins, PrP and APP, and the subsequent implications for neurodegenerative disease.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                CHCOFS
                Chemical Communications
                Chem. Commun.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1359-7345
                1364-548X
                2018
                2018
                : 54
                : 76
                : 10664-10674
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
                [2 ]Mayo Clinic
                [3 ]Rochester
                [4 ]USA
                [5 ]Department of Immunology
                Article
                10.1039/C8CC04396E
                6148388
                30087961
                c50568fe-a206-49ff-9b87-cf044ae664ef
                © 2018

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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