Title of article :
Investigating Mutations to Reduce Huntingtin Aggregation by Increasing Htt-N-Terminal Stability and Weakening Interactions with PolyQ Domain
Author/Authors :
Smaoui, Mohamed R Faculty of Medicine - McGill University - Montreal, Canada , Mazza-Anthony, Cody School of Computer Science - McGill University - Montreal, Canada , Waldispühl, Jérôme School of Computer Science - McGill University - Montreal, Canada
Abstract :
Huntington’s disease is a fatal autosomal genetic disorder characterized by an expanded glutamine-coding CAG repeat sequence in
the huntingtin (Htt) exon 1 gene. The Htt protein associated with the disease misfolds into toxic oligomers and aggregate fibril
structures. Competing models for the misfolding and aggregation phenomena have suggested the role of the Htt-N-terminal
region and the CAG trinucleotide repeats (polyQ domain) in affecting aggregation propensities and misfolding. In particular, one
model suggests a correlation between structural stability and the emergence of toxic oligomers, whereas a second model proposes
that molecular interactions with the extended polyQ domain increase aggregation propensity. In this paper, we computationally
explore the potential to reduce Htt aggregation by addressing the aggregation causes outlined in both models. We investigate the
mutation landscape of the Htt-N-terminal region and explore amino acid residue mutations that affect its structural stability and
hydrophobic interactions with the polyQ domain. Out of the millions of 3-point mutation combinations that we explored, the
(L4K E12K K15E) was the most promising mutation combination that addressed aggregation causes in both models. The mutant
structure exhibited extreme alpha-helical stability, low amyloidogenicity potential, a hydrophobic residue replacement, and removal
of a solvent-inaccessible intermolecular side chain that assists oligomerization.
Keywords :
Htt-N-Terminal , Reduce Huntingtin Aggregation , PolyQ Domain
Journal title :
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine