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Helix-strand interaction regulates stability and aggregation of the human mitochondrial membrane protein channel VDAC3.


ABSTRACT: Voltage-dependent anion channels (VDACs) are ?-sheet-rich transmembrane ?-barrels that are vital for metabolite transport across the mitochondrial membrane. Under cellular stress, human VDACs hetero-oligomerize and coaggregate with proteins that can form amyloidogenic and neurodegenerative deposits, implicating a role for VDACs in proteotoxicity. However, whether VDACs possess intrinsic interaction sites that can lead to protein aggregation is not known. Here, we couple a systematic thiol replacement strategy with far-UV circular dichroism spectropolarimetry and UV scattering spectroscopy to map aggregation-prone regions of human VDACs, using isoform 3 as our model VDAC. We show that the region comprising strands ?7-?9 is highly aggregation prone. Further, we find that an ?1-?7-?9 interaction (involving the hVDAC3 N-terminal ?1 helix) can lower protein aggregation, whereas perturbations of this interaction promote VDAC aggregation. We also show that hVDAC3 aggregation proceeds via a partially unfolded structure. Our findings allow us to propose a plausible mechanism for the role of human VDACs in forming proteotoxic aggregates in the cell. The key target sites on VDACs-strands ?7-?9-may be useful for developing VDAC aggregation inhibitors.

SUBMITTER: Gupta A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6445588 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Helix-strand interaction regulates stability and aggregation of the human mitochondrial membrane protein channel VDAC3.

Gupta Ankit A   Mahalakshmi Radhakrishnan R  

The Journal of general physiology 20190123 4


Voltage-dependent anion channels (VDACs) are β-sheet-rich transmembrane β-barrels that are vital for metabolite transport across the mitochondrial membrane. Under cellular stress, human VDACs hetero-oligomerize and coaggregate with proteins that can form amyloidogenic and neurodegenerative deposits, implicating a role for VDACs in proteotoxicity. However, whether VDACs possess intrinsic interaction sites that can lead to protein aggregation is not known. Here, we couple a systematic thiol replac  ...[more]

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