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Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly

Accumulating evidence shows that amyloids perform biological roles. We previously showed that an amyloid matrix composed of four members of the CRES subgroup of reproductive family 2 cystatins is a normal component of the mouse epididymal lumen. The cellular mechanisms that control the assembly of t...

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Autores principales: Do, Hoa Quynh, Hewetson, Aveline, Borcik, Collin G., Hastert, Mary Catherine, Whelly, Sandra, Wylie, Benjamin J., Sutton, Roger Bryan, Cornwall, Gail A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7948811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33384380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.015307
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author Do, Hoa Quynh
Hewetson, Aveline
Borcik, Collin G.
Hastert, Mary Catherine
Whelly, Sandra
Wylie, Benjamin J.
Sutton, Roger Bryan
Cornwall, Gail A.
author_facet Do, Hoa Quynh
Hewetson, Aveline
Borcik, Collin G.
Hastert, Mary Catherine
Whelly, Sandra
Wylie, Benjamin J.
Sutton, Roger Bryan
Cornwall, Gail A.
author_sort Do, Hoa Quynh
collection PubMed
description Accumulating evidence shows that amyloids perform biological roles. We previously showed that an amyloid matrix composed of four members of the CRES subgroup of reproductive family 2 cystatins is a normal component of the mouse epididymal lumen. The cellular mechanisms that control the assembly of these and other functional amyloid structures, however, remain unclear. We speculated that cross-seeding between CRES members could be a mechanism to control the assembly of the endogenous functional amyloid. Herein we used thioflavin T assays and negative stain transmission electron microscopy to explore this possibility. We show that CRES3 rapidly formed large networks of beaded chains that possessed the characteristic cross-β reflections of amyloid when examined by X-ray diffraction. The beaded amyloids accelerated the amyloidogenesis of CRES, a less amyloidogenic family member, in seeding assays during which beads transitioned into films and fibrils. Similarly, CRES seeds expedited CRES3 amyloidogenesis, although less efficiently than the CRES3 seeding of CRES. These studies suggest that CRES and CRES3 hetero-oligomerize and that CRES3 beaded amyloids may function as stable preassembled seeds. The CRES3 beaded amyloids also facilitated assembly of the unrelated amyloidogenic precursor Aβ by providing a surface for polymerization though, intriguingly, CRES3 (and CRES) monomer/early oligomer profoundly inhibited Aβ assembly. The cross-seeding between the CRES subgroup members is similar to that which occurs between bacterial curli proteins suggesting that it may be an evolutionarily conserved mechanism to control the assembly of some functional amyloids. Further, interactions between unrelated amyloidogenic precursors may also be a means to regulate functional amyloid assembly.
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spelling pubmed-79488112021-03-19 Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly Do, Hoa Quynh Hewetson, Aveline Borcik, Collin G. Hastert, Mary Catherine Whelly, Sandra Wylie, Benjamin J. Sutton, Roger Bryan Cornwall, Gail A. J Biol Chem Research Article Accumulating evidence shows that amyloids perform biological roles. We previously showed that an amyloid matrix composed of four members of the CRES subgroup of reproductive family 2 cystatins is a normal component of the mouse epididymal lumen. The cellular mechanisms that control the assembly of these and other functional amyloid structures, however, remain unclear. We speculated that cross-seeding between CRES members could be a mechanism to control the assembly of the endogenous functional amyloid. Herein we used thioflavin T assays and negative stain transmission electron microscopy to explore this possibility. We show that CRES3 rapidly formed large networks of beaded chains that possessed the characteristic cross-β reflections of amyloid when examined by X-ray diffraction. The beaded amyloids accelerated the amyloidogenesis of CRES, a less amyloidogenic family member, in seeding assays during which beads transitioned into films and fibrils. Similarly, CRES seeds expedited CRES3 amyloidogenesis, although less efficiently than the CRES3 seeding of CRES. These studies suggest that CRES and CRES3 hetero-oligomerize and that CRES3 beaded amyloids may function as stable preassembled seeds. The CRES3 beaded amyloids also facilitated assembly of the unrelated amyloidogenic precursor Aβ by providing a surface for polymerization though, intriguingly, CRES3 (and CRES) monomer/early oligomer profoundly inhibited Aβ assembly. The cross-seeding between the CRES subgroup members is similar to that which occurs between bacterial curli proteins suggesting that it may be an evolutionarily conserved mechanism to control the assembly of some functional amyloids. Further, interactions between unrelated amyloidogenic precursors may also be a means to regulate functional amyloid assembly. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2021-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7948811/ /pubmed/33384380 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.015307 Text en © 2021 THE AUTHORS https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Do, Hoa Quynh
Hewetson, Aveline
Borcik, Collin G.
Hastert, Mary Catherine
Whelly, Sandra
Wylie, Benjamin J.
Sutton, Roger Bryan
Cornwall, Gail A.
Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly
title Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly
title_full Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly
title_fullStr Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly
title_full_unstemmed Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly
title_short Cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic CRES and CRES3 family members and their regulation of Aβ assembly
title_sort cross-seeding between the functional amyloidogenic cres and cres3 family members and their regulation of aβ assembly
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7948811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33384380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.015307
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