Abstract
Ninety-five percent of all transmembrane proteins exist in kinetically trapped aggregation-prone states that have been directly linked to neurodegenerative diseases. Interestingly, the primary sequence almost invariably avoids off-pathway aggregate formation, by folding reliably into its native, thermodynamically stabilized structure. However, with the rising incidence of protein aggregation diseases, it is now important to understand the underlying mechanism(s) of membrane protein aggregation. Micromolecular physicochemical and biochemical alterations in the primary sequence that trigger the formation of macromolecular cross-β aggregates can be measured only through combinatorial spectroscopic experiments. Here, we developed spectroscopic thermal perturbation with 117 experimental variables to assess how subtle protein sequence variations drive the molecular transition of the folded protein to oligomeric aggregates. Using the Yersinia pestis outer transmembrane β-barrel Ail as a model, we delineated how a single-residue substitution that alters the membrane-anchoring ability of Ail significantly contributes to the kinetic component of Ail stability. We additionally observed a stabilizing role for interface aliphatics, and that interface aromatics physicochemically contribute to Ail self-assembly and aggregation. Moreover, our method identified the formation of structured oligomeric intermediates during Ail aggregation. We show that the self-aggregation tendency of Ail is offset by the evolution of a thermodynamically compromised primary sequence that balances folding, stability, and oligomerization. Our approach provides critical information on how subtle changes in protein primary sequence trigger cross-β fibril formation, with insights that have direct implications for deducing the molecular progression of neurodegeneration and amyloidogenesis in humans.
Highlights
Ninety-five percent of all transmembrane proteins exist in kinetically trapped aggregation-prone states that have been directly linked to neurodegenerative diseases
We find that three-dimensional side chain–side chain interactions are critical for outer membrane proteins (OMPs) stability, providing us with a universal mechanism of protein aggregation and the formation of -sheet–rich amyloid-like fibrillar aggregates
The variations we observe for the imaging and fluorescence measurements of Trp 3 Phe/Tyr/Ala mutants correlate proportionately with the amount of structured fibrillar aggregates formed by attachment invasion locus (Ail), which, in turn, depends directly on the amino acid at 42nd and 149th positions
Summary
Aromatic amino acids contribute significantly to both membrane protein stability and protein aggregation. The LDAO concentrations used here are 20-, 50-, and 100-fold above its critical micelle concentration (critical micelle concentration of LDAO in water is ϳ1.0 mM) At these LDAO concentrations, Ail exhibits complete folding without the presence of any aggregated species Folded Ail shows several biophysical properties that are distinct from its unfolded counterpart This allowed us to use independent methods to verify that our starting protein preparations, despite the mutation, were folded reliably and to comparable extents (Fig. 1C; complete data in Fig. S4 –S11). These results confirm that within our experimental conditions, Ail attains a well-folded -barrel conformation in LDAO micelles, the mutation does not affect the final folded state of the protein, and the ensemble of starting conformational states for Ail-WT and its mutants is comparable. Transmembrane -barrel proteins are kinetically trapped structures in the membrane, with a high energy barrier
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