info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Proteins with H-bond packing defects are highly interactive with lipid bilayers: Implications for amyloidogenesis
Fecha
2003-03-04Registro en:
Fernandez, Ariel; Berry, Stephen R.; Proteins with H-bond packing defects are highly interactive with lipid bilayers: Implications for amyloidogenesis; National Academy of Sciences; Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of The United States of America; 100; 5; 4-3-2003; 2391-2396
0027-8424
Electronic
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Fernandez, Ariel
Berry, Stephen R.
Resumen
We noticed that disease-related amyloidogenic proteins and especially cellular prion proteins have the highest proportion of incompletely desolvated backbone H bonds among soluble proteins. Such bonds are vulnerable to water attack and thus represent structural weaknesses. We have measured the adsorption of proteins onto phospholipid bilayers and found a strong correlation between the extent of underwrapping of backbone H bonds in the native structure of a protein and its extent of deposition on the bilayer: the less the H bond wrapping, the higher the propensity for protein-bilayer binding. These observations support the proposition that soluble proteins with amyloidogenic propensity and membrane proteins share a pervasive building motif: the underwrapped H bonds. Whereas in membrane proteins, this motif does not signal a structural vulnerability, in soluble proteins, it is responsible for their reactivity.