Issue June 2006

category image Volume 23
No. 6 (p 581-685)
June 2006
ISSN 0739-110

Rare Large Scale Subdomain Motions in Prion Protein can Initiate Aggregation (p. 581-590)

The prion protein is thought to induce prion diseases by changing its conformation from the cellular form, PrPC, into the infectious Scrapie-form, PrPSc. Little is known about the structural and dynamical features of this conformational change. We here introduce a novel concept that involves rare large scale motions between the subdomains β1-α1-β2 and α2-α3 in the carboxy-terminal, globular part of PrP. The interface between these two subdomains carries most pathogenic mutations known to be associated with prion diseases. Based on computational simulations as well as experimental results we propose that such a large scale motion subsequently destabilizes large parts of the cellular conformer PrPC, thus, rendering it prone to structural rearrangements, including aggregation of now partially unfolded parts of the PrP sequence. We hypothesize that such large scale motions occur as a rare event even under equilibrium conditions and that the interaction of such partially destabilized PrPC-conformers, which we named PrPC*, contributes to the formation of pathogenic oligomeric species of the prion protein.

Key words: TSE; BSE; Prion; Conformational disease; and Folding intermediates.

Stephan Schwarzinger1,*
Anselm H. C. Horn2
Jan Ziegler1
Heinrich Sticht2

1Lehrstuhl Biopolymere
Universität Bayreuth
Universitätsstraße 30
95447 Bayreuth, Germany
2Abteilung Bioinformatik
Institut für Biochemie
Emil-Fischer-Zentrum
Friedrich-Alexander Universität
Erlangen, Germany
*stephan.schwarzinger@uni-bayreuth.de

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