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High-avidity binding drives nucleation of amyloidogenic transthyretin monomer
Li Gao, Xinfang Xie, Pan Liu, Jing Jin
Li Gao, Xinfang Xie, Pan Liu, Jing Jin
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Research Article Aging Cardiology

High-avidity binding drives nucleation of amyloidogenic transthyretin monomer

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Abstract

Amyloidosis involves stepwise growth of fibrils assembled from soluble precursors. Transthyretin (TTR) naturally folds into a stable tetramer, whereas conditions and mutations that foster aberrant monomer formations facilitate TTR oligomeric aggregation and subsequent fibril extension. We investigated the early assembly of oligomers by WT TTR compared with its V30M and V122I variants. We monitored time-dependent redistribution among monomer, dimer, tetramer, and oligomer contents in the presence and absence of multimeric TTR seeds. The seeds were artificially constructed recombinant multimers that contained 20–40 TTR subunits via engineered biotin-streptavidin (SA) interactions. As expected, these multimer seeds rapidly nucleated TTR monomers into larger complexes, while having less effect on dimers and tetramers. In vivo, SA-induced multimers formed TTR-like deposits in the heart and the kidney following i.v. injection in mice. While all 3 variants prominently deposited glomerulus in the kidney, only V30M resulted in extensive deposition in the heart. The cardiac TTR deposits varied in size and shape and were localized in the intermyofibrillar space along the capillaries. These results are consistent with the notion of monomeric TTR engaging in high-avidity interactions with tissue amyloids. Our multimeric induction approach provides a model for studying the initiation of TTR deposition in the heart.

Authors

Li Gao, Xinfang Xie, Pan Liu, Jing Jin

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Figure 3

Dynamics in oligomeric transformation among TTR variants of WT, V30M, and V122I.

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Dynamics in oligomeric transformation among TTR variants of WT, V30M, an...
(A) Freshly thawed TTR proteins in 1M urea pH 7.6 solution were incubated at room temperature for up to 7 days. In between, aliquots were taken from the reaction at indicated time points of 0, 1, 3, 6, and 24 hours, and 3 and 7 days. Left panels compared SEC profiles between 0 and 7 days in terms of monomeric (M), dimeric (D), tetrameric (T) and oligomeric (O) contents. The right panel bar graphs showed the percentage distribution among M, D, R, and O contents as calculated from AUC of the respective peaks over the 7 day period. (B) Treatment of TTR solutions with 100 μM H2O2 further elevated the levels of O (compare A with B), particularly in V30M. (C) Treatment of TTRV30M with 5 mM DTT greatly increased tetramers (compare B with C). Meanwhile, the D contents completely disappeared. (D) Monomeric, dimeric, and tetrameric contents of TTRV30M were separated and collected by SEC. The fractions with the presence or absence of TCEP were resolved by SDS PAGE. TTR bands were visualized by IB using anti-TTR antibody. All experiments were repeated 3 times.

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