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. 2004 Nov 3;126(43):13914-5.
doi: 10.1021/ja0456858.

A designed protein interface that blocks fibril formation

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Free article

A designed protein interface that blocks fibril formation

Ushma J Shukla et al. J Am Chem Soc. .
Free article

Abstract

Protein fibril formation is implicated in many diseases, and therefore much effort has been focused toward the development of inhibitors of this process. In a previous project, a monomeric protein was computationally engineered to bind itself and form a heterodimer complex following interfacial redesign. One of the protein monomers, termed monomer-B, was unintentionally destabilized and shown to form macroscopic fibrils. Interestingly, in the presence of the designed binding partner, fibril formation was blocked. Here we describe the complete characterization of the amyloid properties of monomer-B and the inhibition of fiber formation by the designed binding partner, monomer-A. Both proteins are mutants of the betal domain of streptococcal protein-G. The free monomer-B protein forms amyloid-type fibrils, as determined by transmission electron microscopy and the change in fluorescence of Thioflavin T, an amyloid-specific dye. Fibril formation kinetics are influenced by pH, protein concentration, and seeding with preformed fibrils. Under all conditions tested, monomer-A was able to inhibit the formation of monomer-B fibrils. This inhibition is specific to the engineered interaction, as incubation of monomer-B with wild-type protein-G (a structural homologue) did not result in inhibition under the same conditions. Thus, this de novo-designed heterodimeric complex is an excellent model system for the study of protein-based fibril formation and inhibition. This system provides additional insight into the development of pharmaceuticals for amyloid disorders, as well as the potential use of amyloid fibrils for self-assembling nanostructures.

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