Structure of the cross-β spine of amyloid-like fibrils

R Nelson, MR Sawaya, M Balbirnie, AØ Madsen… - Nature, 2005 - nature.com
R Nelson, MR Sawaya, M Balbirnie, AØ Madsen, C Riekel, R Grothe, D Eisenberg
Nature, 2005nature.com
Numerous soluble proteins convert to insoluble amyloid-like fibrils that have common
properties. Amyloid fibrils are associated with fatal diseases such as Alzheimer's, and
amyloid-like fibrils can be formed in vitro. For the yeast protein Sup35, conversion to amyloid-
like fibrils is associated with a transmissible infection akin to that caused by mammalian
prions. A seven-residue peptide segment from Sup35 forms amyloid-like fibrils and closely
related microcrystals, from which we have determined the atomic structure of the cross-β …
Abstract
Numerous soluble proteins convert to insoluble amyloid-like fibrils that have common properties. Amyloid fibrils are associated with fatal diseases such as Alzheimer's, and amyloid-like fibrils can be formed in vitro. For the yeast protein Sup35, conversion to amyloid-like fibrils is associated with a transmissible infection akin to that caused by mammalian prions. A seven-residue peptide segment from Sup35 forms amyloid-like fibrils and closely related microcrystals, from which we have determined the atomic structure of the cross-β spine. It is a double β-sheet, with each sheet formed from parallel segments stacked in register. Side chains protruding from the two sheets form a dry, tightly self-complementing steric zipper, bonding the sheets. Within each sheet, every segment is bound to its two neighbouring segments through stacks of both backbone and side-chain hydrogen bonds. The structure illuminates the stability of amyloid fibrils, their self-seeding characteristic and their tendency to form polymorphic structures.
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