Methionine Sulfoxides on Prion Protein Helix-3 Switch on the alpha-Fold Destabilization Required for Conversion
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
Background: The conversion of the cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into
the infectious form (PrP(Sc)) is the key event in prion induced
neurodegenerations. This process is believed to involve a multi-step
conformational transition from an alpha-helical (PrP(C)) form to a
beta-sheet-rich (PrP(Sc)) state. In addition to the conformational
difference, PrP(Sc) exhibits as covalent signature the sulfoxidation of
M213. To investigate whether such modification may play a role in the
misfolding process we have studied the impact of methionine oxidation on
the dynamics and energetics of the HuPrP(125-229) alpha-fold.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Using molecular dynamics simulation,
essential dynamics, correlated motions and signal propagation analysis,
we have found that substitution of the sulfur atom of M213 by a
sulfoxide group impacts on the stability of the native state increasing
the flexibility of regions preceding the site of the modification and
perturbing the network of stabilizing interactions. Together, these
changes favor the population of alternative states which maybe essential
in the productive pathway of the pathogenic conversion. These changes
are also observed when the sulfoxidation is placed at M206 and at both,
M206 and M213.
Conclusions/Significance: Our results suggest that the sulfoxidation of
Helix-3 methionines might be the switch for triggering the initial
alpha-fold destabilization required for the productive pathogenic
conversion.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Colombo, Giorgio; Meli, Massimiliano; Morra, Giulia; Gabizon, Ruth; Gasset, Maria
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