Abstract

Enhanced protein aggregation and/or impaired clearance of aggregates can lead to neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s Disease, Huntington’s Disease, and prion diseases. Therefore, many protein quality control factors specialize in recognizing and degrading aggregation-prone proteins. Prions, which generally result from self-propagating protein aggregates, must therefore evade or outcompete these quality control systems in order to form and propagate in a cellular context. We developed a genetic screen in yeast that allowed us to explore the sequence features that promote degradation versus aggregation of a model glutamine/asparagine (Q/N)-rich prion domain from the yeast prion protein, Sup35, and two model glycine (G)-rich prion-like domains from the human proteins hnRNPA1 and hnRNPA2. Unexpectedly, we found that aggregation propensity and degradation propensity could be uncoupled in multiple ways. First, only a subset of classically aggregation-promoting amino acids elicited a strong degradation response in the G-rich prion-like domains. Specifically, large aliphatic residues enhanced degradation of the prion-like domains, whereas aromatic residues promoted prion aggregation without enhancing degradation. Second, the degradation-promoting effect of aliphatic residues was suppressed in the context of the Q/N-rich prion domain, and instead led to a dose-dependent increase in the frequency of spontaneous prion formation. Degradation suppression correlated with Q/N content of the surrounding prion domain, potentially indicating an underappreciated activity for these residues in yeast prion domains. Collectively, these results provide key insights into how certain aggregation-prone proteins may evade protein quality control degradation systems.

Highlights

  • Protein misfolding disorders involve the conversion of native proteins into non-native, deleterious forms

  • Protein aggregation is associated with a variety of diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

  • While considerable progress has been made in understanding how the amino acid sequence of a protein relates to intrinsic aggregation propensity, little is known about how aggregation

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Summary

Introduction

Protein misfolding disorders involve the conversion of native proteins into non-native, deleterious forms. Some misfolded proteins form highly ordered amyloid aggregates, stabilized by intermolecular cross-β sheets. Once formed, these aggregates can convert remaining soluble proteins to the aggregated form via a templated misfolding mechanism [1]. Enhanced protein aggregation or impaired clearance of aggregates can lead to neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s Disease, Parkinson’s Disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), and Huntington’s Disease (for review, see [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]). Prion diseases represent a unique sub-class of protein misfolding disorders in which protein aggregates are infectious. First described in mammals, a number of prion proteins were later found to occur in budding yeast [11, 12]

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