Photo-induced cross-linking of unmodified proteins (PICUP) applied to amyloidogenic peptides
- PMID: 19229175
- PMCID: PMC2763294
- DOI: 10.3791/1071
Photo-induced cross-linking of unmodified proteins (PICUP) applied to amyloidogenic peptides
Abstract
The assembly of amyloidogenic proteins into toxic oligomers is a seminal event in the pathogenesis of protein misfolding diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's diseases, hereditary amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and type 2 diabetes. Owing to the metastable nature of these protein assemblies, it is difficult to assess their oligomer size distribution quantitatively using classical methods, such as electrophoresis, chromatography, fluorescence, or dynamic light scattering. Oligomers of amyloidogenic proteins exist as metastable mixtures, in which the oligomers dissociate into monomers and associate into larger assemblies simultaneously. PICUP stabilizes oligomer populations by covalent cross-linking and when combined with fractionation methods, such as sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) or size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), PICUP provides snapshots of the oligomer size distributions that existed before cross-linking. Hence, PICUP enables visualization and quantitative analysis of metastable protein populations and can be used to monitor assembly and decipher relationships between sequence modifications and oligomerization(1). Mechanistically, PICUP involves photo-oxidation of Ru(2+) in a tris(bipyridyl)Ru(II) complex (RuBpy) to Ru(3+) by irradiation with visible light in the presence of an electron acceptor. Ru(3+) is a strong one-electron oxidizer capable of abstracting an electron from a neighboring protein molecule, generating a protein radical(1,2). Radicals are unstable, highly-reactive species and therefore disappear rapidly through a variety of intra- and intermolecular reactions. A radical may utilize the high energy of an unpaired electron to react with another protein monomer forming a dimeric radical, which subsequently loses a hydrogen atom and forms a stable, covalently-linked dimer. The dimer may then react further through a similar mechanism with monomers or other dimers to form higher-order oligomers. Advantages of PICUP relative to other photo- or chemical cross-linking methods(3,4) include short (<or=1 s) exposure to non-destructive visible light, no need for pre facto modification of the native sequence, and zero-length covalent cross-linking. In addition, PICUP enables cross-linking of proteins within wide pH and temperature ranges, including physiologic parameters. Here, we demonstrate application of PICUP to cross-linking of three amyloidogenic proteins the 40- and 42-residue amyloid beta-protein variants (Abeta40 and Abeta42), and calcitonin, and a control protein, growth-hormone releasing factor (GRF).
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