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Solution conditions affect the ability of the K30D mutation to prevent amyloid fibril formation by apolipoprotein C-II: insights from experiments and theoretical simulations

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 00:55 authored by Yu Mao, Nevena TodorovaNevena Todorova, Courtney Zlatic, Paul Gooley, Michael Griffin, Geoffrey Howlett, Irene YarovskyIrene Yarovsky
Apolipoproteins form amphipathic helical structures that bind lipid surfaces. Paradoxically, lipid-free apolipoproteins display a strong propensity to form cross-β structure and self-associate into disease-related amyloid fibrils. Studies of apolipoprotein C-II (apoC-II) amyloid fibrils suggest that a K30-D69 ion pair accounts for the dual abilities to form helix and cross-β structure. Consistent with this is the observation that a K30D mutation prevents fibril formation under standard fibril forming conditions. However, we found that fibril formation by K30D apoC-II proceeded readily at low pH and a higher salt or protein concentration. Structural analysis demonstrated that K30D apoC-II fibrils at pH 7 have a structure similar to that of the wild-type fibrils but are less stable. Molecular dynamics simulations of the wild-type apoC-II fibril model at pH 7 and 3 showed that the loss of charge on D69 at pH 3 leads to greater separation between residues K30 and D69 within the fibril with a corresponding reduction in β-strand content around residue 30. In contrast, in simulations of the K30D mutant model at pH 7 and 3, residues D30 and D69 moved closer at pH 3, accompanied by an increase in β-strand content around residue 30. The simulations also demonstrated a strong dominance of inter- over intramolecular contacts between ionic residues of apoC-II and suggested a cooperative mechanism for forming favorable interactions between the individual strands under different conditions. These observations demonstrate the important role of the buried K30-D69 ion pair in the stability and solution properties of apoC-II amyloid fibrils.

Funding

Macromolecular Self-Assembly of Amyloid Fibrils

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Biochemistry

Volume

55

Issue

27

Start page

3815

End page

3824

Total pages

10

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006063650

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-07-29

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