Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a widely distributed prion disease of cervids with implications for wildlife conservation and also for human and livestock health. The structures of infectious prions that cause CWD and other natural prion diseases of mammalian hosts have been poorly understood. Here we report a 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurodegenerative tauopathies such as Alzheimer's disease (AD) are caused by brain accumulation of tau assemblies. Evidence suggests tau functions as a prion, and cells and animals can efficiently propagate unique, transmissible tau pathologies. This suggests a dedicated cellular replication machinery, potentially reflecting a normal physiologic function for tau seeds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrion strains in a given type of mammalian host are distinguished by differences in clinical presentation, neuropathological lesions, survival time, and characteristics of the infecting prion protein (PrP) assemblies. Near-atomic structures of prions from two host species with different PrP sequences have been determined but comparisons of distinct prion strains of the same amino acid sequence are needed to identify purely conformational determinants of prion strain characteristics. Here we report a 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structures of prion protein (PrP)-based mammalian prions have long been elusive. However, cryo-EM has begun to reveal the near-atomic resolution structures of fully infectious ex vivo mammalian prion fibrils as well as relatively innocuous synthetic PrP amyloids. Comparisons of these various types of PrP fibrils are now providing initial clues to structural features that correlate with pathogenicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllostery is the phenomenon of coupling between distal binding sites in a protein. Such coupling is at the crux of protein function and regulation in a myriad of scenarios, yet determining the molecular mechanisms of coupling networks in proteins remains a major challenge. Here, we report mechanisms governing pH-dependent myristoyl switching in monomeric hisactophilin, whereby the myristoyl moves between a sequestered state, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin the extensive range of self-propagating pathologic protein aggregates of mammals, prions are the most clearly infectious (e.g., ∼10 lethal doses per milligram).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Chem Neurosci
December 2020
Although prion protein fibrils can have either parallel-in-register intermolecular β-sheet (PIRIBS) or, probably, β-solenoid architectures, the plausibility of PIRIBS architectures for the usually glycosylated natural prion strains has been questioned based the expectation that such glycans would not fit if stacked in-register on each monomer within a fibril. To directly assess this issue, we have added N-linked glycans to a recently reported cryo-electron microscopy-based human prion protein amyloid model with a PIRIBS architecture and performed molecular dynamics studies to determine if the glycans can fit. Our results show that triantennary glycans can be sterically accommodated in-register on both N-linked glycosylation sites of each monomer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFModeling the pH dependence of protein and peptide chemical shifts outside the range of physiological values (6.5-7) is key to understanding structure-function relationships of these systems. These capabilities are largely not available in current chemical shift prediction software.
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