posted on 2015-08-11, 00:00authored byYu Mao, Courtney
O. Zlatic, Michael D. W. Griffin, Geoffrey J. Howlett, Nevena Todorova, Irene Yarovsky, Paul R. Gooley
Plasma
apolipoproteins form amphipathic α helices in lipid
environments but in the lipid-free state show a high propensity to
form β structure and self-associate into amyloid fibrils. The
widespread occurrence of apolipoproteins in amyloid plaques suggests
disease-related roles, specifically in atherosclerosis. To reconcile
the dual abilities of apolipoproteins to form either α helices
or cross-β sheet structures, we examined fibrils formed by human
apolipoprotein C-II (apoC-II). A structural model for apoC-II fibrils
shows a cross-β
core with parallel β strands, including a buried K30-D69 charge
pair. We investigated the effect of abolishing this charge pair in
mutant D69K apoC-II. Fluorescence studies indicated more rapid fibril
formation and less solvent accessibility of tryptophan (W26) in D69K
apoC-II fibrils than in wild-type (WT) fibrils. X-ray diffraction
data of aligned D69K apoC-II fibrils yielded a typical cross-β
structure with increased β sheet spacing compared to that of
WT fibrils. Hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange patterns were similar
for D69K apoC-II fibrils compared to WT fibrils, albeit with an overall
reduction in the level of slow H/D exchange, particularly around residues
29–32.
Molecular dynamics simulations indicated reduced β strand
content for a model D69K apoC-II tetramer compared to the WT tetramer
and confirmed an expansion of the cross-β spacing that contributed
to the formation of a stable charge pair between K69 and E27. The
results highlight the importance of charge-pair interactions within
the apoC-II fibril core, which together with numerous salt bridges
in the flexible connecting loop play a major role in the ability of
lipid-free apoC-II to form stable cross-β fibrils.