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Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins

S100 proteins are small dimeric calcium-binding proteins which control cell cycle, growth and differentiation via interactions with different target proteins. Intrinsic disorder is a hallmark among many signaling proteins and S100 proteins have been proposed to contain disorder-prone regions. Intere...

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Autores principales: Carvalho, Sofia B., Botelho, Hugo M., Leal, Sónia S., Cardoso, Isabel, Fritz, Günter, Gomes, Cláudio M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3788126/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24098542
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076629
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author Carvalho, Sofia B.
Botelho, Hugo M.
Leal, Sónia S.
Cardoso, Isabel
Fritz, Günter
Gomes, Cláudio M.
author_facet Carvalho, Sofia B.
Botelho, Hugo M.
Leal, Sónia S.
Cardoso, Isabel
Fritz, Günter
Gomes, Cláudio M.
author_sort Carvalho, Sofia B.
collection PubMed
description S100 proteins are small dimeric calcium-binding proteins which control cell cycle, growth and differentiation via interactions with different target proteins. Intrinsic disorder is a hallmark among many signaling proteins and S100 proteins have been proposed to contain disorder-prone regions. Interestingly, some S100 proteins also form amyloids: S100A8/A9 forms fibrils in prostatic inclusions and S100A6 fibrillates in vitro and seeds SOD1 aggregation. Here we report a study designed to investigate whether β-aggregation is a feature extensive to more members of S100 family. In silico analysis of seven human S100 proteins revealed a direct correlation between aggregation and intrinsic disorder propensity scores, suggesting a relationship between these two independent properties. Averaged position-specific analysis and structural mapping showed that disorder-prone segments are contiguous to aggregation-prone regions and that whereas disorder is prominent on the hinge and target protein-interaction regions, segments with high aggregation propensity are found in ordered regions within the dimer interface. Acidic conditions likely destabilize the seven S100 studied by decreasing the shielding of aggregation-prone regions afforded by the quaternary structure. In agreement with the in silico analysis, hydrophobic moieties become accessible as indicated by strong ANS fluorescence. ATR-FTIR spectra support a structural inter-conversion from α-helices to intermolecular β-sheets, and prompt ThT-binding takes place with no noticeable lag phase. Dot blot analysis using amyloid conformational antibodies denotes a high diversity of conformers; subsequent analysis by TEM shows fibrils as dominant species. Altogether, our data suggests that β-aggregation and disorder-propensity are related properties in S100 proteins, and that the onset of aggregation is likely triggered by loss of protective tertiary and quaternary interactions.
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spelling pubmed-37881262013-10-04 Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins Carvalho, Sofia B. Botelho, Hugo M. Leal, Sónia S. Cardoso, Isabel Fritz, Günter Gomes, Cláudio M. PLoS One Research Article S100 proteins are small dimeric calcium-binding proteins which control cell cycle, growth and differentiation via interactions with different target proteins. Intrinsic disorder is a hallmark among many signaling proteins and S100 proteins have been proposed to contain disorder-prone regions. Interestingly, some S100 proteins also form amyloids: S100A8/A9 forms fibrils in prostatic inclusions and S100A6 fibrillates in vitro and seeds SOD1 aggregation. Here we report a study designed to investigate whether β-aggregation is a feature extensive to more members of S100 family. In silico analysis of seven human S100 proteins revealed a direct correlation between aggregation and intrinsic disorder propensity scores, suggesting a relationship between these two independent properties. Averaged position-specific analysis and structural mapping showed that disorder-prone segments are contiguous to aggregation-prone regions and that whereas disorder is prominent on the hinge and target protein-interaction regions, segments with high aggregation propensity are found in ordered regions within the dimer interface. Acidic conditions likely destabilize the seven S100 studied by decreasing the shielding of aggregation-prone regions afforded by the quaternary structure. In agreement with the in silico analysis, hydrophobic moieties become accessible as indicated by strong ANS fluorescence. ATR-FTIR spectra support a structural inter-conversion from α-helices to intermolecular β-sheets, and prompt ThT-binding takes place with no noticeable lag phase. Dot blot analysis using amyloid conformational antibodies denotes a high diversity of conformers; subsequent analysis by TEM shows fibrils as dominant species. Altogether, our data suggests that β-aggregation and disorder-propensity are related properties in S100 proteins, and that the onset of aggregation is likely triggered by loss of protective tertiary and quaternary interactions. Public Library of Science 2013-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3788126/ /pubmed/24098542 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076629 Text en © 2013 Carvalho et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Carvalho, Sofia B.
Botelho, Hugo M.
Leal, Sónia S.
Cardoso, Isabel
Fritz, Günter
Gomes, Cláudio M.
Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
title Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
title_full Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
title_fullStr Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
title_full_unstemmed Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
title_short Intrinsically Disordered and Aggregation Prone Regions Underlie β-Aggregation in S100 Proteins
title_sort intrinsically disordered and aggregation prone regions underlie β-aggregation in s100 proteins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3788126/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24098542
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076629
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