• Title of article

    Serpin Acceleration of Amyloid Fibril Formation: A Role for Accessory Proteins

  • Author/Authors

    Glenn A. Powers، نويسنده , , Chi L.L. Pham، نويسنده , , Mary C. Pearce، نويسنده , , Geoffrey J. Howlett، نويسنده , , Stephen P. Bottomley، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    666
  • To page
    676
  • Abstract
    Protein aggregation underlies an increasing number of human diseases. Recent experiments have shown that the aggregation reaction is exquisitely specific involving particular interactions between non-native proteins. However, aggregation of certain proteins, for example β-amyloid, in vivo leads to the recruitment of other proteins into the aggregate. Antichymotrypsin, a non-fibril forming protein, is always observed to be associated with β-amyloid plaques in Alzheimerʹs sufferers. The role of antichymotrypsin is controversial with studies showing it can either accelerate or inhibit the aggregation reaction. To investigate the role of antichymotrypsin in fibrillogenesis we have studied its interaction with apolipoprotein C-II, a well characterized model system for the study of fibrillogenesis. Our data demonstrate that sub-stoichiometric amounts of antichymotrypsin and its alternate structural forms can dramatically accelerate the aggregation of apolipoprotein C-II, whereas the presence of α1-antitrypsin, a structural homologue of antichymotrypsin, cannot. Sedimentation velocity experiments show more apolipoprotein C-II fibrils were formed in the presence of antichymotrypsin. Using pull-down assays and immuno-gold labeling we demonstrate an interaction between antichymotrypsin and apolipoprotein C-II fibrils that specifically occurs during fibrillogenesis. Taken together these data demonstrate an interaction between antichymotrypsin and apolipoprotein C-II that accelerates fibrillogenesis and indicates a specific role for accessory proteins in protein aggregation.
  • Keywords
    protein aggregation , antichymotrypsin , Serpin , conformational disease , fibrillogenesis
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1249054