Moore Roger A, Herzog Christian, Errett John, Kocisko David A, Arnold Kevin M, Hayes Stanley F, Priola Suzette A
The Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy & Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 903 S. 4th Street, Hamilton, Montana 59840, USA.
Protein Sci. 2006 Mar;15(3):609-19. doi: 10.1110/ps.051822606. Epub 2006 Feb 1.
A central feature of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE or prion diseases) involves the conversion of a normal, protease-sensitive glycoprotein termed prion protein (PrP-sen) into a pro-tease-resistant form, termed PrP-res. The N terminus of PrP-sen has five copies of a repeating eight amino acid sequence (octapeptide repeat). The presence of one to nine extra copies of this motif is associated with a heritable form of Creutzfeld-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans. An increasing number of octapeptide repeats correlates with earlier CJD onset, suggesting that the rate at which PrP-sen misfolds into PrP-res may be influenced by these mutations. In order to determine if octapeptide repeat insertions influence the rate at which PrP-res is formed, we used a hamster PrP amyloid-forming peptide (residues 23-144) into which two to 10 extra octapeptide repeats were inserted. The spontaneous formation of protease-resistant PrP amyloid from these peptides was more rapid in response to an increased number of octapeptide repeats. Furthermore, experiments using full-length glycosylated hamster PrP-sen demonstrated that PrP-res formation also occurred more rapidly from PrP-sen molecules expressing 10 extra copies of the octapeptide repeat. The rate increase for PrP-res formation did not appear to be due to any influence of the octapeptide repeat region on PrP structure, but rather to more rapid binding between PrP molecules. Our data from both models support the hypothesis that extra octapeptide repeats in PrP increase the rate at which protease resistant PrP is formed which in turn may affect the rate of disease onset in familial forms of CJD.
传染性海绵状脑病(TSE或朊病毒病)的一个核心特征是,一种正常的、对蛋白酶敏感的糖蛋白——朊病毒蛋白(PrP-sen)转变为一种对蛋白酶具有抗性的形式,即PrP-res。PrP-sen的N端有五个重复的八肽氨基酸序列(八肽重复序列)。该基序额外出现一到九个拷贝与人类可遗传形式的克雅氏病(CJD)相关。八肽重复序列的数量增加与CJD发病较早相关,这表明PrP-sen错误折叠为PrP-res的速率可能受这些突变影响。为了确定八肽重复序列的插入是否会影响PrP-res的形成速率,我们使用了一种仓鼠PrP淀粉样蛋白形成肽(第23 - 144位氨基酸残基),其中插入了两到十个额外的八肽重复序列。随着八肽重复序列数量的增加,这些肽自发形成对蛋白酶具有抗性的PrP淀粉样蛋白的速度更快。此外,使用全长糖基化仓鼠PrP-sen进行的实验表明,从表达额外十个拷贝八肽重复序列的PrP-sen分子中形成PrP-res的速度也更快。PrP-res形成速率的增加似乎并非由于八肽重复序列区域对PrP结构有任何影响,而是由于PrP分子之间的结合更快。我们从这两个模型获得的数据支持以下假设:PrP中额外的八肽重复序列会增加蛋白酶抗性PrP的形成速率,这反过来可能会影响家族性CJD的发病速率。