The ability of many proteins to fold into well-defined structures has been traditionally considered a prerequisite for fulfilling their functions. Protein folding is also regarded as a valuable loophole to escape uncontrolled and harmful aggregations. Here we show that the PBX-regulating protein-1 (PREP1), an important homeodomain transcription factor involved in cell growth and differentiation during embryogenesis, is endowed with an uncommon thermostability. Indeed, circular dichroism analyses indicate that it retains most of its secondary structure at very high temperatures. These findings have important implications for PREP1 functions since it is a stabilizing factor of its partner PBX1. Predictive analyses suggest that the observed PREP1 thermostability could be related to the presence of aggregation-prone regions. Interestingly, synthetic peptides corresponding to these regions exhibit a remarkable propensity to form toxic beta-rich amyloid-like aggregates in physiological conditions. On this basis, we suggest that PREP1 stability is an effective way to prevent or limit the formation of harmful aggregates. Notably, one of these PREP1 fragments (residues 117-132) is able to reversibly switch from alpha-helical to beta-rich states depending on the environmental conditions. The chameleon conformational behavior of this peptide makes it an ideal system to study this intriguing and widespread structural transition. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Identification and characterization of cytotoxic amyloid-like regions in human Pbx-regulating protein-1

Doti Nunzianna;Monti Alessandra;Caporale Andrea;Ruvo Menotti;Vitagliano Luigi
2020

Abstract

The ability of many proteins to fold into well-defined structures has been traditionally considered a prerequisite for fulfilling their functions. Protein folding is also regarded as a valuable loophole to escape uncontrolled and harmful aggregations. Here we show that the PBX-regulating protein-1 (PREP1), an important homeodomain transcription factor involved in cell growth and differentiation during embryogenesis, is endowed with an uncommon thermostability. Indeed, circular dichroism analyses indicate that it retains most of its secondary structure at very high temperatures. These findings have important implications for PREP1 functions since it is a stabilizing factor of its partner PBX1. Predictive analyses suggest that the observed PREP1 thermostability could be related to the presence of aggregation-prone regions. Interestingly, synthetic peptides corresponding to these regions exhibit a remarkable propensity to form toxic beta-rich amyloid-like aggregates in physiological conditions. On this basis, we suggest that PREP1 stability is an effective way to prevent or limit the formation of harmful aggregates. Notably, one of these PREP1 fragments (residues 117-132) is able to reversibly switch from alpha-helical to beta-rich states depending on the environmental conditions. The chameleon conformational behavior of this peptide makes it an ideal system to study this intriguing and widespread structural transition. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
2020
PREP1
Protein aggregation-prone regions (APRs)
Tumor diagnosis
NMR
Thioflavin-T fluorescence assay
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/420877
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