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Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α

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Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α. / Nielsen, Søren Bang; Yde, Pernille; Giehm, Lise et al.
In: Journal of Molecular Biology, 2012.

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, SB, Yde, P, Giehm, L, Sundbye, S, Christiansen, G, Matthiesen, J, Jensen, MH, Jensen, PH & Otzen, DE 2012, 'Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α', Journal of Molecular Biology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

APA

Nielsen, S. B., Yde, P., Giehm, L., Sundbye, S., Christiansen, G., Matthiesen, J., Jensen, M. H., Jensen, P. H., & Otzen, D. E. (2012). Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α. Journal of Molecular Biology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

CBE

Nielsen SB, Yde P, Giehm L, Sundbye S, Christiansen G, Matthiesen J, Jensen MH, Jensen PH, Otzen DE. 2012. Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α. Journal of Molecular Biology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

MLA

Nielsen, Søren Bang et al. "Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α". Journal of Molecular Biology. 2012. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

Vancouver

Nielsen SB, Yde P, Giehm L, Sundbye S, Christiansen G, Matthiesen J et al. Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α. Journal of Molecular Biology. 2012. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

Author

Nielsen, Søren Bang ; Yde, Pernille ; Giehm, Lise et al. / Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α. In: Journal of Molecular Biology. 2012.

Bibtex

@article{25df86c9e8874a3eb4d06b8b7014ac87,
title = "Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α",
abstract = "The 219-residue protein p25α stimulates the fibrillation of α-synuclein (αSN) in vitro and colocalizes with it in several α-synucleinopathies. Although p25α does not fibrillate by itself under native conditions in vitro, αSN-free p25α aggregates have also been observed in vivo in, for example, multiple system atrophy. To investigate which environmental conditions might trigger this aggregation, we investigated the effect of polyanionic biomolecules on p25α aggregation. Heparin, polyglutamate, arachidonic acid micelles, and RNA all induce p25α aggregation. More detailed studies using heparin as template for aggregation reveal that a minimum of 10-14 heparin monosaccharide units per heparin polymer are required. Bona fide fibrils are only formed at intermediate heparin concentrations, possibly because an excess of heparin binding sites blocks the inter-p25α contacts required for amyloid formation. Other polyanions also show an optimum for amyloid formation. Aggregation involves only modest structural changes according to both spectroscopic and proteolytic experiments. The aggregates do not seed aggregation of heparin-free p25α, suggesting that heparin is required in stoichiometric amounts to form organized structures. We are able to reproduce these observations in a model involving two levels of binding of p25α to heparin. We conclude that the modest structural changes that p25α undergoes can promote weak intermolecular contacts and that polyanions such as heparin play a central role in stabilizing these aggregates but in multiple ways, leading to different types of aggregates. This highlights the role of non-protein components in promoting protein aggregation in vivo.",
author = "Nielsen, {S{\o}ren Bang} and Pernille Yde and Lise Giehm and Sabrina Sundbye and Gunna Christiansen and Joachim Matthiesen and Jensen, {Mogens H{\o}gh} and Jensen, {Poul Henning} and Otzen, {Daniel E}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2012. Published by Elsevier Ltd.",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Molecular Biology",
issn = "0022-2836",
publisher = "Academic Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multiple Roles of Heparin in the Aggregation of p25α

AU - Nielsen, Søren Bang

AU - Yde, Pernille

AU - Giehm, Lise

AU - Sundbye, Sabrina

AU - Christiansen, Gunna

AU - Matthiesen, Joachim

AU - Jensen, Mogens Høgh

AU - Jensen, Poul Henning

AU - Otzen, Daniel E

N1 - Copyright © 2012. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - The 219-residue protein p25α stimulates the fibrillation of α-synuclein (αSN) in vitro and colocalizes with it in several α-synucleinopathies. Although p25α does not fibrillate by itself under native conditions in vitro, αSN-free p25α aggregates have also been observed in vivo in, for example, multiple system atrophy. To investigate which environmental conditions might trigger this aggregation, we investigated the effect of polyanionic biomolecules on p25α aggregation. Heparin, polyglutamate, arachidonic acid micelles, and RNA all induce p25α aggregation. More detailed studies using heparin as template for aggregation reveal that a minimum of 10-14 heparin monosaccharide units per heparin polymer are required. Bona fide fibrils are only formed at intermediate heparin concentrations, possibly because an excess of heparin binding sites blocks the inter-p25α contacts required for amyloid formation. Other polyanions also show an optimum for amyloid formation. Aggregation involves only modest structural changes according to both spectroscopic and proteolytic experiments. The aggregates do not seed aggregation of heparin-free p25α, suggesting that heparin is required in stoichiometric amounts to form organized structures. We are able to reproduce these observations in a model involving two levels of binding of p25α to heparin. We conclude that the modest structural changes that p25α undergoes can promote weak intermolecular contacts and that polyanions such as heparin play a central role in stabilizing these aggregates but in multiple ways, leading to different types of aggregates. This highlights the role of non-protein components in promoting protein aggregation in vivo.

AB - The 219-residue protein p25α stimulates the fibrillation of α-synuclein (αSN) in vitro and colocalizes with it in several α-synucleinopathies. Although p25α does not fibrillate by itself under native conditions in vitro, αSN-free p25α aggregates have also been observed in vivo in, for example, multiple system atrophy. To investigate which environmental conditions might trigger this aggregation, we investigated the effect of polyanionic biomolecules on p25α aggregation. Heparin, polyglutamate, arachidonic acid micelles, and RNA all induce p25α aggregation. More detailed studies using heparin as template for aggregation reveal that a minimum of 10-14 heparin monosaccharide units per heparin polymer are required. Bona fide fibrils are only formed at intermediate heparin concentrations, possibly because an excess of heparin binding sites blocks the inter-p25α contacts required for amyloid formation. Other polyanions also show an optimum for amyloid formation. Aggregation involves only modest structural changes according to both spectroscopic and proteolytic experiments. The aggregates do not seed aggregation of heparin-free p25α, suggesting that heparin is required in stoichiometric amounts to form organized structures. We are able to reproduce these observations in a model involving two levels of binding of p25α to heparin. We conclude that the modest structural changes that p25α undergoes can promote weak intermolecular contacts and that polyanions such as heparin play a central role in stabilizing these aggregates but in multiple ways, leading to different types of aggregates. This highlights the role of non-protein components in promoting protein aggregation in vivo.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

DO - 10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.050

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 22326478

JO - Journal of Molecular Biology

JF - Journal of Molecular Biology

SN - 0022-2836

ER -