An alternative structural isoform in amyloid-like aggregates formed from thermally denatured human ?D-crystallin.
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ABSTRACT: The eye lens protein ?D-crystallin contributes to cataract formation in the lens. In vitro experiments show that ?D-crystallin has a high propensity to form amyloid fibers when denatured, and that denaturation by acid or UV-B photodamage results in its C-terminal domain forming the ?-sheet core of amyloid fibers. Here, we show that thermal denaturation results in sheet-like aggregates that contain cross-linked oligomers of the protein, according to transmission electron microscopy and SDS-PAGE. We use two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy to show that these aggregates have an amyloid-like secondary structure with extended ?-sheets, and use isotope dilution experiments to show that each protein contributes approximately one ?-strand to each ?-sheet in the aggregates. Using segmental (13) C labeling, we show that the organization of the protein's two domains in thermally induced aggregates results in a previously unobserved structure in which both the N-terminal and C-terminal domains contribute to ?-sheets. We propose a model for the structural organization of the aggregates and attribute the recruitment of the N-terminal domain into the fiber structure to intermolecular cross linking.
SUBMITTER: Moran SD
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3945840 | biostudies-other | 2014 Mar
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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