posted on 2004-05-04, 00:00authored byLuc Bousset, Virginie Redeker, Paulette Decottignies, Steven Dubois, Pierre Le Maréchal, Ronald Melki
The protein Ure2 from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has prion properties. It assembles
in vitro into long, straight, insoluble fibrils that are similar to amyloids in that they bind Congo Red and
show green-yellow birefringence and have an increased resistance to proteolysis. We recently showed
that Ure2p fibrils assembled under physiologically relevant conditions are devoid of a cross-β-core. A
model for fibril formation, where assembly is driven by non-native inter- and/or intramolecular interaction
between Ure2p monomers following subtle conformational changes was proposed [Bousset et al. (2002)
EMBO J. 21, 2903−2911]. An alternative model for the assembly of Ure2p into fibrils where assembly
is driven by the stacking of 40−70 N-terminal amino acid residues of Ure2p into a central β-core running
along the fibrils from which the C-terminal domains protrude was proposed [Baxa et al. (2003) J. Biol.
Chem. 278, 43717−43727]. We show here that Ure2p fibril congophilia and the associated yellow-green
birefringence in polarized light are not indicative that the fibrils are of amyloid nature. We map the structures
of the fibrillar and soluble forms of Ure2p using limited proteolysis and identify the reaction products by
microsequencing and mass spectrometry. Finally, we demonstrate that the C-terminal domain of Ure2p is
tightly involved in the fibrillar scaffold using a sedimentation assay and a variant Ure2p where a highly
specific cleavage site between the N- and C-terminal domains of the protein was engineered. Our results
are inconsistent with the cross-β-core model and support the model for Ure2p assembly driven by subtle
conformational changes and underline the influence of the natural context of the N-terminal domain on
the assembly of Ure2p.