Abstract

Protein domains without the usual distribution of amino acids, called low complexity (LC) domains, can be prone to self-assembly into amyloid-like fibrils. Self-assembly of LC domains that are nearly devoid of hydrophobic residues, such as the 214-residue LC domain of the RNA-binding protein FUS, is particularly intriguing from the biophysical perspective and is biomedically relevant due to its occurrence within neurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, frontotemporal dementia, and other neurodegenerative diseases. We report a high-resolution molecular structural model for fibrils formed by the C-terminal half of the FUS LC domain (FUS-LC-C, residues 111-214), based on a density map with 2.62 Å resolution from cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). In the FUS-LC-C fibril core, residues 112-150 adopt U-shaped conformations and form two subunits with in-register, parallel cross-β structures, arranged with quasi-21 symmetry. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the FUS-LC-C fibril core is stabilized by a plethora of hydrogen bonds involving sidechains of Gln, Asn, Ser, and Tyr residues, both along and transverse to the fibril growth direction, including diverse sidechain-to-backbone, sidechain-to-sidechain, and sidechain-to-water interactions. Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements additionally show that portions of disordered residues 151-214 remain highly dynamic in FUS-LC-C fibrils and that fibrils formed by the N-terminal half of the FUS LC domain (FUS-LC-N, residues 2-108) have the same core structure as fibrils formed by the full-length LC domain. These results contribute to our understanding of the molecular structural basis for amyloid formation by FUS and by LC domains in general.

Highlights

  • Protein domains without the usual distribution of amino acids, called low complexity (LC) domains, can be prone to self-assembly into amyloid-like fibrils

  • We report studies of the C-terminal half of FUS-LC (FUSLC-C, residues 111–214). This segment is dynamically disordered in fibrils formed by full-length FUS-LC, we find that FUS-LC-C by itself readily forms highly ordered fibrils, suitable for molecular structure determination by cryogenic electron microscopy

  • In fibrils formed by full-length FUS-LC with the sequence in Fig. 1a, residues 39–95 form the structurally ordered cross-β core, whereas the C-terminal half of the sequence is mainly dynamically disordered[21,30]

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Summary

Introduction

Protein domains without the usual distribution of amino acids, called low complexity (LC) domains, can be prone to self-assembly into amyloid-like fibrils. Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements show that portions of disordered residues 151-214 remain highly dynamic in FUS-LC-C fibrils and that fibrils formed by the Nterminal half of the FUS LC domain (FUS-LC-N, residues 2-108) have the same core structure as fibrils formed by the full-length LC domain. These results contribute to our understanding of the molecular structural basis for amyloid formation by FUS and by LC domains in general. Liquid-like FUS droplets represent a metastable condition[15], with the thermodynamic end state being FUS fibrils

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