AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses the ongoing debate about how native human transthyretin (TTR) converts into amyloid fibrils in the body, emphasizing the differences in research conditions used for studying this process.
  • It focuses on two specific TTR variants, S52P and L111M, that cause severe systemic amyloidosis, particularly affecting the heart, and highlights their varying stability and susceptibility to proteolytic cleavage.
  • The study shows that while both variants are similar in stability, the L111M variant is more prone to cleavage and faster fibril formation when influenced by factors like heparin and fibrillar seeds, indicating complex mechanisms at play in amyloid formation.

Article Abstract

The mechanism that converts native human transthyretin into amyloid fibrils in vivo is still a debated and controversial issue. Commonly, non-physiological conditions of pH, temperature, or organic solvents are used in in vitro models of fibrillogenesis of globular proteins. Transthyretin amyloid formation can be achieved under physiological conditions through a mechano-enzymatic mechanism involving specific serine proteases such as trypsin or plasmin. Here, we investigate S52P and L111M transthyretin variants, both causing a severe form of systemic amyloidosis mostly targeting the heart at a relatively young age with heterogeneous phenotype among patients. Our studies on thermodynamics show that both proteins are significantly less stable than other amyloidogenic variants. However, despite a similar thermodynamic stability, L111M variant seems to have enhanced susceptibility to cleavage and a lower tendency to form fibrils than S52P in the presence of specific proteases and biomechanical forces. Heparin strongly enhances the fibrillogenic capacity of L111M transthyretin, but has no effect on the S52P variant. Fibrillar seeds similarly affect the fibrillogenesis of both proteins, with a stronger effect on the L111M variant. According to our model of mechano-enzymatic fibrillogenesis, both full-length and truncated monomers, released after the first cleavage, can enter into fibrillogenesis or degradation pathways. Our findings show that the kinetics of the two processes can be affected by several factors, such as intrinsic amyloidogenicity due to the specific mutations, environmental factors including heparin and fibrillar seeds that significantly accelerate the fibrillogenic pathway.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10880434PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4931DOI Listing

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