One of the major hallmarks of Parkinson disease is aggregation of the protein α-synuclein (αSN). Aggregate cytotoxicity has been linked to an oligomeric species formed at early stages in the aggregation process. Here we follow the fibrillation process of αSN in solution over time using small angle X-ray scattering and resolve four major coexisting species in the fibrillation process, namely monomer, dimer, fibril and an oligomer. By ab initio modeling to fit the data, we obtain a low-resolution structure of a symmetrical and slender αSN fibril in solution, consisting of a repeating unit with a maximal distance of 900 Å and a diameter of ∼180 Å. The same approach shows the oligomer to be shaped like a wreath, with a central channel and with dimensions corresponding to the width of the fibril. The structure, accumulation and decay of this oligomer is consistent with an on-pathway role for the oligomer in the fibrillation process. We propose an oligomer-driven αSN fibril formation mechanism, where the fibril is built from the oligomers. The wreath-shaped structure of the oligomer highlights its potential cytotoxicity by simple membrane permeabilization. This is confirmed by the ability of the purified oligomer to disrupt liposomes. Our results provide the first structural description in solution of a potentially cytotoxic oligomer, which accumulates during the fibrillation of αSN.alpha-synuclein | amyloid | structral nucleus | solution structure P arkinson Disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disorder of the brain. Hallmarks of PD are massive death of dopaminergic neurons and formation of intracellular Lewy bodies (LBs). LBs mainly consist of large fibrillar inclusions of α-synuclein (αSN), a 140-residue natively unfolded protein (1). Numerous in vitro studies of αSN fibrillation have shown that fibril formation is a nucleated polymerization and that oligomers form transiently in the lag phase (1-5). Such oligomers, rather than fibrils or monomers, have been suggested to be the neurotoxic species (4, 6), however whether the oligomers are on-or offpathway in fibril formation and whether the cytotoxic species corresponds to the nucleus of fibrillation remain unclear. Neurotoxicity is proposed to arise from a pore-like membrane permeabilization (6) or by destabilization of the membrane allowing nonspecific ion-transport (7). Unambiguous structural information of the cytotoxic species is difficult to obtain due to sample coexistence of different species, sensitivity to sample handling and potential surface-binding artifacts. The morphology of purified oligomers from wildtype and mutant αSN have been studied by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and electron microscopy (EM) (4, 5), but purified oligomers may be structurally and functionally distinct from those in equilibrium with monomers and fibrils. Different conditions can lead to different oligomers (4, 5, 8) with varying ability to disrupt artificial cell membranes (9-12). Ideally, structural studies should be conducted on an unperturbed ensemble of all potential ...
Although amyloid fibrillation is generally believed to be a nucleation-dependent process, the nuclei are largely structurally uncharacterized. This is in part due to the inherent experimental challenge associated with structural descriptions of individual components in a dynamic multi-component equilibrium. There are indications that oligomeric aggregated precursors of fibrillation, and not mature fibrils, are the main cause of cytotoxicity in amyloid disease. This further emphasizes the importance of characterizing early fibrillation events. Here we present a kinetic x-ray solution scattering study of insulin fibrillation, revealing three major components: insulin monomers, mature fibrils, and an oligomeric species. Low-resolution three-dimensional structures are determined for the fibril repeating unit and for the oligomer, the latter being a helical unit composed of five to six insulin monomers. This helical oligomer is likely to be a structural nucleus, which accumulates above the supercritical concentration used in our experiments. The growth rate of the fibrils is proportional to the amount of the helical oligomer present in solution, suggesting that these oligomers elongate the fibrils. Hence, the structural nucleus and elongating unit in insulin amyloid fibrillation may be the same structural component above supercritical concentrations. A novel elongation pathway of insulin amyloid fibrils is proposed, based on the shape and size of the fibrillation precursor. The distinct helical oligomer described in this study defines a conceptually new basis of structure-based drug design against amyloid diseases.
Inhibition of the ternary protein complex of the synaptic scaffolding protein postsynaptic density protein-95 (PSD-95), neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS), and the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor is a potential strategy for treating ischemic brain damage, but high-affinity inhibitors are lacking. Here we report the design and synthesis of a novel dimeric inhibitor, Tat-NPEG4ðIETDVÞ 2 (Tat-N-dimer), which binds the tandem PDZ1-2 domain of PSD-95 with an unprecedented high affinity of 4.6 nM, and displays extensive protease-resistance as evaluated in vitro by stability-measurements in human blood plasma. X-ray crystallography, NMR, and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) deduced a true bivalent interaction between dimeric inhibitor and PDZ1-2, and also provided a dynamic model of the conformational changes of PDZ1-2 induced by the dimeric inhibitor. A single intravenous injection of Tat-N-dimer (3 nmol∕g) to mice subjected to focal cerebral ischemia reduces infarct volume with 40% and restores motor functions. Thus, Tat-Ndimer is a highly efficacious neuroprotective agent with therapeutic potential in stroke.drug discovery | ischemic stroke | protein-protein interactions P rotein-protein interactions mediated by postsynaptic density protein-95 (PSD-95)/Discs-large/ZO-1 (PDZ) domains are important for intracellular signaling events, and several PDZ domains are potential drug targets for neuronal diseases and cancer (1, 2). The postsynaptic scaffolding protein PSD-95 simultaneously binds the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-type of ionotropic glutamate receptors and the enzyme neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) through its PDZ1 and PDZ2 domains (3). Activation of the NMDA receptor causes influx of Ca 2þ , which activates nNOS thereby leading to nitric oxide generation (4), a key facilitator of glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity (5, 6). Ligands that bind to the first two PDZ domains of PSD-95 inhibit the formation of the ternary nNOS/PSD-95/NMDA receptor complex and uncouple the harmful production of nitric oxide from NMDA receptor activity (Fig. 1A). As PSD-95 inhibition does not affect ion-flux (7) or prosurvival signaling pathways (8) mediated by the NMDA receptor, it is believed that compounds targeting PDZ1 and PDZ2 of PSD-95 can provide an efficient and safe treatment of ischemic brain damage (9), where excitotoxicity is known to dominate in the acute poststroke period, as well as other NMDA receptor-related disorders such as chronic pain and Alzheimer's disease (10-14).The shallow and elongated binding pocket of PDZ domains generally favor binding of peptides or peptide analogues and so far no drug-like small-molecule inhibitors of PDZ domains with affinities below 5 μM have been identified (15). Accordingly, the most advanced PSD-95 inhibitor is a 20-mer peptide, Tat-NR2B9c (7, 8, 16), composed of nine amino acids corresponding to the C-terminal of the GluN2B subunit of the NMDA receptor, fused to the HIV-1 Tat peptide (17). This peptide has shown promising effects against ischemic brain damage in rats (...
Bacterial release factor RF2 promotes termination of protein synthesis, specifically recognizing stop codons UAA or UGA. The crystal structure of Escherichia coli RF2 has been determined to a resolution of 1.8 A. RF2 is structurally distinct from its eukaryotic counterpart eRF1. The tripeptide SPF motif, thought to confer RF2 stop codon specificity, and the universally conserved GGQ motif, proposed to be involved with the peptidyl transferase center, are exposed in loops only 23 A apart, and the structure suggests that stop signal recognition is more complex than generally believed.
The orphan glutamate-like receptor GluR␦2 is predominantly expressed in Purkinje cells of the central nervous system. The classification of GluR␦2 to the ionotropic glutamate receptor family is based on sequence similarities, because GluR␦2 does not form functional homomeric glutamate-gated ion channels in transfected cells. Studies in GluR␦2 ؊/؊ knockout mice as well as in mice with naturally occurring mutations in the GluR␦2 gene have demonstrated an essential role of GluR␦2 in cerebellar long-term depression, motor learning, motor coordination, and synaptogenesis. However, the lack of a known agonist has hampered investigations on the function of GluR␦2. In this study, the ligand-binding core of GluR␦2 (GluR␦2-S1S2) was found to bind neutral amino acids such as D-serine and glycine, as demonstrated by isothermal titration calorimetry. Direct evidence for binding of D-serine and structural rearrangements in the binding cleft of GluR␦2-S1S2 is provided by x-ray structures of GluR␦2-S1S2 in its apo form and in complex with D-serine. Functionally, D-serine and glycine were shown to inactivate spontaneous ion-channel conductance in GluR␦2 containing the lurcher mutation (EC 50 values, 182 and 507 M, respectively). These data demonstrate that the GluR␦2 ligand-binding core is capable of binding ligands and that cleft closure of the ligandbinding core can induce conformational changes that alter ion permeation.crystal structure ͉ electrophysiology ͉ isothermal titration calorimetry ͉ ligand-binding core
A fully open source software program for automated two‐dimensional and one‐dimensional data reduction and preliminary analysis of isotropic small‐angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS) data is presented. The program is freely distributed, following the open‐source philosophy, and does not rely on any commercial software packages. BioXTAS RAW is a fully automated program that, via an online feature, reads raw two‐dimensional SAXS detector output files and processes and plots data as the data files are created during measurement sessions. The software handles all steps in the data reduction. This includes mask creation, radial averaging, error bar calculation, artifact removal, normalization and q calibration. Further data reduction such as background subtraction and absolute intensity scaling is fast and easy via the graphical user interface. BioXTAS RAW also provides preliminary analysis of one‐dimensional data in terms of the indirect Fourier transform using the objective Bayesian approach to obtain the pair‐distance distribution function, PDDF, and is thereby a free and open‐source alternative to existing PDDF estimation software. Apart from the TIFF input format, the program also accepts ASCII‐format input files and is currently compatible with one‐dimensional data files from SAXS beamlines at a number of synchrotron facilities. BioXTAS RAW is written in Python with C++ extensions.
Termination of protein synthesis occurs when the messenger RNA presents a stop codon in the ribosomal aminoacyl (A) site. Class I release factor proteins (RF1 or RF2) are believed to recognize stop codons via tripeptide motifs, leading to release of the completed polypeptide chain from its covalent attachment to transfer RNA in the ribosomal peptidyl (P) site. Class I RFs possess a conserved GGQ amino-acid motif that is thought to be involved directly in protein-transfer-RNA bond hydrolysis. Crystal structures of bacterial and eukaryotic class I RFs have been determined, but the mechanism of stop codon recognition and peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis remains unclear. Here we present the structure of the Escherichia coli ribosome in a post-termination complex with RF2, obtained by single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). Fitting the known 70S and RF2 structures into the electron density map reveals that RF2 adopts a different conformation on the ribosome when compared with the crystal structure of the isolated protein. The amino-terminal helical domain of RF2 contacts the factor-binding site of the ribosome, the 'SPF' loop of the protein is situated close to the mRNA, and the GGQ-containing domain of RF2 interacts with the peptidyl-transferase centre (PTC). By connecting the ribosomal decoding centre with the PTC, RF2 functionally mimics a tRNA molecule in the A site. Translational termination in eukaryotes is likely to be based on a similar mechanism.
The X-ray structure of the ligand-binding core of the kainate receptor GluR5 (GluR5-S1S2) in complex with (S)-glutamate was determined to 1.95 Å resolution. The overall GluR5-S1S2 structure comprises two domains and is similar to the related AMPA receptor GluR2-S1S2J. (S)-glutamate binds as in GluR2-S1S2J. Distinct features are observed for Ser741, which stabilizes a highly coordinated network of water molecules and forms an interdomain bridge. The GluR5 complex exhibits a high degree of domain closure (26°) relative to apo GluR2-S1S2J. In addition, GluR5-S1S2 forms a novel dimer interface with a different arrangement of the two protomers compared to GluR2-S1S2J.
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