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AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor

α(1)-Proteinase inhibitor (antitrypsin) is a canonical example of the serpin family member that binds and inhibits serine proteases. The natural metastability of serpins is crucial to carry out structural rearrangements necessary for biological activity. However, the enhanced metastability of the mu...

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Autores principales: Gaczynska, Maria, Karpowicz, Przemyslaw, Stuart, Christine E., Norton, Malgorzata G., Teckman, Jeffrey H., Marszal, Ewa, Osmulski, Pawel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4805282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27008547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0151902
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author Gaczynska, Maria
Karpowicz, Przemyslaw
Stuart, Christine E.
Norton, Malgorzata G.
Teckman, Jeffrey H.
Marszal, Ewa
Osmulski, Pawel A.
author_facet Gaczynska, Maria
Karpowicz, Przemyslaw
Stuart, Christine E.
Norton, Malgorzata G.
Teckman, Jeffrey H.
Marszal, Ewa
Osmulski, Pawel A.
author_sort Gaczynska, Maria
collection PubMed
description α(1)-Proteinase inhibitor (antitrypsin) is a canonical example of the serpin family member that binds and inhibits serine proteases. The natural metastability of serpins is crucial to carry out structural rearrangements necessary for biological activity. However, the enhanced metastability of the mutant Z variant of antitrypsin, in addition to folding defect, may substantially contribute to its polymerization, a process leading to incurable serpinopathy. The metastability also impedes structural studies on the polymers. There are no crystal structures of Z monomer or any kind of polymers larger than engineered wild type (WT) trimer. Our understanding of polymerization mechanisms is based on biochemical data using in vitro generated WT oligomers and molecular simulations. Here we applied atomic force microscopy (AFM) to compare topography of monomers, in vitro formed WT oligomers, and Z type polymers isolated from transgenic mouse liver. We found the AFM images of monomers closely resembled an antitrypsin outer shell modeled after the crystal structure. We confirmed that the Z variant demonstrated higher spontaneous propensity to dimerize than WT monomers. We also detected an unexpectedly broad range of different types of polymers with periodicity and topography depending on the applied method of polymerization. Short linear oligomers of unit arrangement similar to the Z polymers were especially abundant in heat-treated WT preparations. Long linear polymers were a prominent and unique component of liver extracts. However, the liver preparations contained also multiple types of oligomers of topographies undistinguishable from those found in WT samples polymerized with heat, low pH or guanidine hydrochloride treatments. In conclusion, we established that AFM is an excellent technique to assess morphological diversity of antitrypsin polymers, which is important for etiology of serpinopathies. These data also support previous, but controversial models of in vivo polymerization showing a surprising diversity of polymer topography.
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spelling pubmed-48052822016-03-25 AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor Gaczynska, Maria Karpowicz, Przemyslaw Stuart, Christine E. Norton, Malgorzata G. Teckman, Jeffrey H. Marszal, Ewa Osmulski, Pawel A. PLoS One Research Article α(1)-Proteinase inhibitor (antitrypsin) is a canonical example of the serpin family member that binds and inhibits serine proteases. The natural metastability of serpins is crucial to carry out structural rearrangements necessary for biological activity. However, the enhanced metastability of the mutant Z variant of antitrypsin, in addition to folding defect, may substantially contribute to its polymerization, a process leading to incurable serpinopathy. The metastability also impedes structural studies on the polymers. There are no crystal structures of Z monomer or any kind of polymers larger than engineered wild type (WT) trimer. Our understanding of polymerization mechanisms is based on biochemical data using in vitro generated WT oligomers and molecular simulations. Here we applied atomic force microscopy (AFM) to compare topography of monomers, in vitro formed WT oligomers, and Z type polymers isolated from transgenic mouse liver. We found the AFM images of monomers closely resembled an antitrypsin outer shell modeled after the crystal structure. We confirmed that the Z variant demonstrated higher spontaneous propensity to dimerize than WT monomers. We also detected an unexpectedly broad range of different types of polymers with periodicity and topography depending on the applied method of polymerization. Short linear oligomers of unit arrangement similar to the Z polymers were especially abundant in heat-treated WT preparations. Long linear polymers were a prominent and unique component of liver extracts. However, the liver preparations contained also multiple types of oligomers of topographies undistinguishable from those found in WT samples polymerized with heat, low pH or guanidine hydrochloride treatments. In conclusion, we established that AFM is an excellent technique to assess morphological diversity of antitrypsin polymers, which is important for etiology of serpinopathies. These data also support previous, but controversial models of in vivo polymerization showing a surprising diversity of polymer topography. Public Library of Science 2016-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4805282/ /pubmed/27008547 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0151902 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gaczynska, Maria
Karpowicz, Przemyslaw
Stuart, Christine E.
Norton, Malgorzata G.
Teckman, Jeffrey H.
Marszal, Ewa
Osmulski, Pawel A.
AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor
title AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor
title_full AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor
title_fullStr AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor
title_full_unstemmed AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor
title_short AFM Imaging Reveals Topographic Diversity of Wild Type and Z Variant Polymers of Human α(1)-Proteinase Inhibitor
title_sort afm imaging reveals topographic diversity of wild type and z variant polymers of human α(1)-proteinase inhibitor
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4805282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27008547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0151902
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