Cargando…

A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells

Peptides and proteins can convert from their soluble forms into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, giving rise to pathological conditions ranging from neurodegenerative disorders to systemic amyloidoses. It is increasingly recognized that protein oligomers forming early in the process of fibril ag...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zampagni, Mariagioia, Cascella, Roberta, Casamenti, Fiorella, Grossi, Cristina, Evangelisti, Elisa, Wright, Daniel, Becatti, Matteo, Liguri, Gianfranco, Mannini, Benedetta, Campioni, Silvia, Chiti, Fabrizio, Cecchi, Cristina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4394221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21155974
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2010.01239.x
_version_ 1782366264645124096
author Zampagni, Mariagioia
Cascella, Roberta
Casamenti, Fiorella
Grossi, Cristina
Evangelisti, Elisa
Wright, Daniel
Becatti, Matteo
Liguri, Gianfranco
Mannini, Benedetta
Campioni, Silvia
Chiti, Fabrizio
Cecchi, Cristina
author_facet Zampagni, Mariagioia
Cascella, Roberta
Casamenti, Fiorella
Grossi, Cristina
Evangelisti, Elisa
Wright, Daniel
Becatti, Matteo
Liguri, Gianfranco
Mannini, Benedetta
Campioni, Silvia
Chiti, Fabrizio
Cecchi, Cristina
author_sort Zampagni, Mariagioia
collection PubMed
description Peptides and proteins can convert from their soluble forms into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, giving rise to pathological conditions ranging from neurodegenerative disorders to systemic amyloidoses. It is increasingly recognized that protein oligomers forming early in the process of fibril aggregation represent the pathogenic species in protein deposition diseases. The N-terminal domain of the HypF protein from Escherichia coli (HypF-N) has previously been shown to form, under distinct conditions, two types of HypF-N oligomers with indistinguishable morphologies but distinct structural features at the molecular level. Only the oligomer type exposing hydrophobic surfaces and possessing sufficient structural plasticity is toxic (type A), whereas the other type is benign to cultured cells (type B). Here we show that only type A oligomers are able to induce a Ca(2+) influx from the cell medium to the cytosol, to penetrate the plasma membrane, to increase intracellular reactive oxygen species production, lipid peroxidation and release of intracellular calcein, resulting in the activation of the apoptotic pathway. Remarkably, these oligomers can also induce a loss of cholinergic neurons when injected into rat brains. By contrast, markers of cellular stress and viability were unaffected in cultured and rat neuronal cells exposed to type B oligomers. The analysis of the time scales of such effects indicates that the difference of toxicity between the two oligomer types involve the early events of the toxicity cascade, shedding new light on the mechanism of action of protein oligomers and on the molecular targets for the therapeutic intervention against protein deposition diseases.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4394221
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43942212015-04-13 A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells Zampagni, Mariagioia Cascella, Roberta Casamenti, Fiorella Grossi, Cristina Evangelisti, Elisa Wright, Daniel Becatti, Matteo Liguri, Gianfranco Mannini, Benedetta Campioni, Silvia Chiti, Fabrizio Cecchi, Cristina J Cell Mol Med Articles Peptides and proteins can convert from their soluble forms into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, giving rise to pathological conditions ranging from neurodegenerative disorders to systemic amyloidoses. It is increasingly recognized that protein oligomers forming early in the process of fibril aggregation represent the pathogenic species in protein deposition diseases. The N-terminal domain of the HypF protein from Escherichia coli (HypF-N) has previously been shown to form, under distinct conditions, two types of HypF-N oligomers with indistinguishable morphologies but distinct structural features at the molecular level. Only the oligomer type exposing hydrophobic surfaces and possessing sufficient structural plasticity is toxic (type A), whereas the other type is benign to cultured cells (type B). Here we show that only type A oligomers are able to induce a Ca(2+) influx from the cell medium to the cytosol, to penetrate the plasma membrane, to increase intracellular reactive oxygen species production, lipid peroxidation and release of intracellular calcein, resulting in the activation of the apoptotic pathway. Remarkably, these oligomers can also induce a loss of cholinergic neurons when injected into rat brains. By contrast, markers of cellular stress and viability were unaffected in cultured and rat neuronal cells exposed to type B oligomers. The analysis of the time scales of such effects indicates that the difference of toxicity between the two oligomer types involve the early events of the toxicity cascade, shedding new light on the mechanism of action of protein oligomers and on the molecular targets for the therapeutic intervention against protein deposition diseases. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2011-10 2011-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4394221/ /pubmed/21155974 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2010.01239.x Text en © 2011 The Authors Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine © 2011 Foundation for Cellular and Molecular Medicine/Blackwell Publishing Ltd
spellingShingle Articles
Zampagni, Mariagioia
Cascella, Roberta
Casamenti, Fiorella
Grossi, Cristina
Evangelisti, Elisa
Wright, Daniel
Becatti, Matteo
Liguri, Gianfranco
Mannini, Benedetta
Campioni, Silvia
Chiti, Fabrizio
Cecchi, Cristina
A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
title A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
title_full A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
title_fullStr A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
title_short A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
title_sort comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4394221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21155974
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2010.01239.x
work_keys_str_mv AT zampagnimariagioia acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT cascellaroberta acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT casamentifiorella acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT grossicristina acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT evangelistielisa acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT wrightdaniel acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT becattimatteo acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT ligurigianfranco acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT manninibenedetta acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT campionisilvia acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT chitifabrizio acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT cecchicristina acomparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT zampagnimariagioia comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT cascellaroberta comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT casamentifiorella comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT grossicristina comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT evangelistielisa comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT wrightdaniel comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT becattimatteo comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT ligurigianfranco comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT manninibenedetta comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT campionisilvia comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT chitifabrizio comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells
AT cecchicristina comparisonofthebiochemicalmodificationscausedbytoxicandnontoxicproteinoligomersincells