posted on 2021-07-21, 12:05authored byYiping Cao, Jozef Adamcik, Michael Diener, Janet R. Kumita, Raffaele Mezzenga
The
propensity to self-assemble into amyloid fibrils with a shared
cross-β architecture is a generic feature of proteins. Amyloid-related
diseases affect millions of people worldwide, yet they are incurable
and cannot be effectively prevented, largely due to the irreversible
assembly and extraordinary stability of amyloid fibrils. Recent studies
suggest that labile amyloids may be possible in certain proteins containing
low-complexity domains often involved in the formation of subcellular
membraneless organelles. Although the fundamental understanding of
this reversible amyloid folding process is completely missing, the
current view is that a given protein sequence will result in either
irreversible, as in most of the cases, or reversible amyloid fibrils,
as in few exceptions. Here we show that two common globular proteins,
human lysozyme and its homologue from hen egg white, can self-assemble
into both reversible and irreversible amyloid fibrils depending on
the folding path followed by the protein. In both folding states,
the amyloid nature of the fibrils is demonstrated at the molecular
level by its cross-β structure, yet with substantial differences
on the mesoscopic polymorphism and the labile nature of the amyloid
state. Structural analysis shows that reversible and irreversible
amyloid fibrils possess the same full-length protein sequence but
different fibril core structures and β-sheet arrangements. These
results illuminate a mechanistic link between the reversible and irreversible
nature of amyloids and highlight the central role of protein folding
states in regulating the lability and reversibility of amyloids.