Abstract

The globular to fibrillar transition of proteins represents a key pathogenic event in the development of amyloid diseases. Although systemic amyloidoses share the common characteristic of amyloid deposition in the extracellular matrix, they are clinically heterogeneous as the affected organs may vary. The observation that precursors of amyloid fibrils derived from circulating globular plasma proteins led to huge efforts in trying to elucidate the structural events determining the protein metamorphosis from their globular to fibrillar state. Whereas the process of metamorphosis has inspired poets and writers from Ovid to Kafka, protein metamorphism is a more recent concept. It is an ideal metaphor in biochemistry for studying the protein folding paradigm and investigating determinants of folding dynamics. Although we have learned how to transform both normal and pathogenic globular proteins into fibrillar polymers in vitro, the events occurring in vivo, are far more complex and yet to be explained. A major gap still exists between in vivo and in vitro models of fibrillogenesis as the biological complexity of the disease in living organisms cannot be reproduced at the same extent in the test tube. Reviewing the major scientific attempts to monitor the amyloidogenic metamorphosis of globular proteins in systems of increasing complexity, from cell culture to human tissues, may help to bridge the gap between the experimental models and the actual pathological events in patients.

Highlights

  • Metamorphosis is a process of transformation of an entity into a different form, acquiring a different identity

  • Despite extraordinary progress made in the last 3 decades on the theoretical and experimental elucidation of the molecular basis of metamorphogenesis of amyloidogenic proteins, we still do not understand which are the major molecular events that in vivo dictate the transformation of globular proteins into fibrils

  • The attempt to model the conformation of amyloidogenic fragments using AlphaFold2 leads to structures that differ from those based on molecular dynamics or experimental NMR restraints

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Summary

Introduction

Metamorphosis is a process of transformation of an entity into a different form, acquiring a different identity. Both proteins can cause amyloid in either their wild type form or in their genetic variants associated with the familial forms of the disease.

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