Amyloids are self-assembled protein architectures implicated in dozens of misfolding diseases. These assemblies appear to emerge through a "selection" of specific conformational "strains" which nucleate and propagate within cells to cause disease. The short Abeta(16-22) peptide, which includes the central core of the Alzheimer's disease Abeta peptide, generates an amyloid fiber which is morphologically indistinguishable from the full-length peptide fiber, but it can also form other morphologies under distinct conditions. Here we combine spectroscopic and microscopy analyses that reveal the subtle atomic-level differences that dictate assembly of two conformationally pure Abeta(16-22) assemblies, amyloid fibers and nanotubes, and define the minimal repeating unit for each assembly.
Caulobacter crescentus undergoes an asymmetric cell division controlled by a genetic circuit that cycles in space and time. We provide a universal strategy for defining the coding potential of bacterial genomes by applying ribosome profiling, RNA-seq, global 5′-RACE, and liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS) data to the 4-megabase C. crescentus genome. We mapped transcript units at single base-pair resolution using RNA-seq together with global 5′-RACE. Additionally, using ribosome profiling and LC-MS, we mapped translation start sites and coding regions with near complete coverage. We found most start codons lacked corresponding Shine-Dalgarno sites although ribosomes were observed to pause at internal Shine-Dalgarno sites within the coding DNA sequence (CDS). These data suggest a more prevalent use of the Shine-Dalgarno sequence for ribosome pausing rather than translation initiation in C. crescentus. Overall 19% of the transcribed and translated genomic elements were newly identified or significantly improved by this approach, providing a valuable genomic resource to elucidate the complete C. crescentus genetic circuitry that controls asymmetric cell division.
Ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules play an important role in organizing eukaryotic mRNA metabolism via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) of mRNA decay factors into membrane-less organelles in the cytoplasm. Here we show that the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus Ribonuclease (RNase) E assembles RNP LLPS condensates that we term bacterial RNP-bodies (BR-bodies), similar to eukaryotic P-bodies and stress granules. RNase E requires RNA to assemble a BR-body, and disassembly requires RNA cleavage, suggesting BR-bodies provide localized sites of RNA degradation. The unstructured C-terminal domain of RNase E is both necessary and sufficient to assemble the core of the BR-body, is functionally conserved in related α-proteobacteria, and influences mRNA degradation. BR-bodies are rapidly induced under cellular stresses and provide enhanced cell growth under stress. To our knowledge, Caulobacter RNase E is the first bacterial protein identified that forms LLPS condensates, providing an effective strategy for subcellular organization in cells lacking membrane-bound compartments.
The protein-only infectious agents known as prions exist within cellular matrices as populations of assembled polypeptide phases ranging from particles to amyloid fibres. These phases appear to undergo Darwinian-like selection and propagation, yet remarkably little is known about their accessible chemical and biological functions. Here we construct simple peptides that assemble into well-defined amyloid phases and define paracrystalline surfaces able to catalyse specific enantioselective chemical reactions. Structural adjustments of individual amino acid residues predictably control both the assembled crystalline order and their accessible catalytic repertoire. Notably, the density and proximity of the extended arrays of enantioselective catalytic sites achieve template-directed polymerization of new polymers. These diverse amyloid templates can now be extended as dynamic self-propagating templates for the construction of even more complex functional materials.
Recent evidence suggests that simple peptides can access diverse amphiphilic phases, and that these structures underlie the robust and widely distributed assemblies implicated in nearly 40 protein misfolding diseases. Here we exploit a minimal nucleating core of the Aβ peptide of Alzheimer's disease to map its morphologically accessible phases that include stable intermolecular molten particles, fibers, twisted and helical ribbons, and nanotubes. Analyses with both fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) and transmission electron microscopy provide evidence for liquid-liquid phase separations, similar to the coexisting dilute and dense protein-rich liquid phases so critical for the liquid-solid transition in protein crystallization. We show that the observed particles are critical for transitions to the more ordered cross-β peptide phases, which are prevalent in all amyloid assemblies, and identify specific conditions that arrest assembly at the phase boundaries. We have identified a size dependence of the particles in order to transition to the para-crystalline phase and a width of the cross-β assemblies that defines the transition between twisted fibers and helically coiled ribbons. These experimental results reveal an interconnected network of increasing molecularly ordered cross-β transitions, greatly extending the initial computational models for cross-β assemblies.
Ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules play an important role in organizing eukaryotic mRNA metabolism via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) of mRNA decay factors into membrane-less “droplet” organelles in the cytoplasm. Here we show that the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus Ribonuclease (RNase) E assembles RNP LLPS droplets that we term bacterial RNP-bodies (BR-bodies) similar to eukaryotic P-bodies and stress granules. RNase E requires RNA to assemble a BR-body, and disassembly requires RNA cleavage, suggesting BR-bodies provide localized sites of RNA degradation. The unstructured C-terminal domain of RNase E is both necessary and sufficient to assemble the core of the BR-body, is functionally conserved in related α-proteobacteria, and influences mRNA degradation. BR-bodies are rapidly induced under cellular stresses and provide enhanced cell growth under stress. To our knowledge, Caulobacter RNase E is the first bacterial protein identified that forms LLPS droplets, providing an effective strategy for subcellular organization in cells lacking membrane bound compartments.
Protein and peptide assembly into amyloid has been implicated in functions that range from beneficial epigenetic controls to pathological etiologies. However, the exact structures of the assemblies that regulate biological activity remain poorly defined. We have previously used Zn 2؉ to modulate the assembly kinetics and morphology of congeners of the amyloid  peptide (A) associated with Alzheimer's disease. We now reveal a correlation among A-Cu 2؉ coordination, peptide self-assembly, and neuronal viability. By using the central segment of A, HHQKLVFFA or A(13-21), which contains residues H13 and H14 implicated in A-metal ion binding, we show that Cu 2؉ forms complexes with A(13-21) and its K16A mutant and that the complexes, which do not selfassemble into fibrils, have structures similar to those found for the human prion protein, PrP. N-terminal acetylation and H14A substitution, Ac-A(13-21)H14A, alters metal coordination, allowing Cu 2؉ to accelerate assembly into neurotoxic fibrils. These results establish that the N-terminal region of A can access different metal-ion-coordination environments and that different complexes can lead to profound changes in A self-assembly kinetics, morphology, and toxicity. Related metal-ion coordination may be critical to the etiology of other neurodegenerative diseases.copper-binding ͉ neurotoxicity ͉ self-assembly P rotein intermolecular assembly, especially formation of amyloid fibrillar structures, is correlated with a variety of human neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob diseases (1). More recently, amyloid has been tied to many nonpathological functional roles. For example, formation and self-perpetuation of amyloids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae regulate diverse yeast phenotypic expression as a positive response to environmental fluctuations (2), and amyloid may be involved in long-term memory and synapse maintenance in the marine snail, Aplysia (3, 4). Many proteins, including archetypical globular proteins such as myoglobin, can also form amyloid fibrils, suggesting that amyloidogenesis may be an intrinsic property of any ␣-amino acid polymer (5). Accordingly, these highly ordered paracrystalline protein self-assemblies have now been recognized as useful for nanostructure fabrication and biotechnology (6-8). Fully capturing these technological opportunities and understanding the biological roles of amyloid will depend on further definition of the organized structure and assembly pathway.Increasing evidence now implicates transition metal ions, including Zn 2ϩ , Cu 2ϩ , and Fe 3ϩ , as contributors both to amyloid  (A) assembly in vitro and to the neuropathology of Alzheimer's disease, AD (9). The obligatory region of metal ion (Zn 2ϩ /Cu 2ϩ ) binding of A has been mapped to the N terminus, amino acids 1-28 (10-16). In its soluble nonamyloid conformation, the peptide contains multiple intramolecular binding sites for Zn 2ϩ and Cu 2ϩ (9, 17), and intermolecular Zn 2ϩ binding can promote A aggrega...
Amyloid fibers, independent of primary amino acid sequence, share a common cross-beta structure and bind the histochemical dye Congo Red (CR). Despite extensive use of CR in amyloid diagnostics, remarkably little is known about the specific and characteristic binding interactions. Fibril insolubility, morphological inhomogeneity, and multiple possible ligand binding sites all conspire to limit characterization. Here, we have exploited the structure of cross-beta nanotubes, which limit the number of potential binding sites, to directly interrogate cross-beta laminate grooves. CR bound to cross-beta nanotubes displays the hallmark apple-green interference color, a broad red-shifted low energy transition, and a K(d) of 1.9 +/- 0.5 microM. Oriented electron diffraction and linear dichroism defines the orientation of CR as parallel to the amyloid long axis and colinear with laminate grooves. The broad red-shifted UV signature of CR bound to amyloid can be explained by semiempirical quantum calculations that support the existence of a precise network of J- and H-CR aggregates, illuminating the ability of the amyloid to organize molecules into extended arrays that underlie the remarkable diagnostic potential of CR.
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