Critical balance of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions is required for β2-Microglobulin amyloid fibril growth and stability

Raman, Bakthisaran ; Chatani, Eri ; Kihara, Miho ; Ban, Tadato ; Sakai, Miyo ; Hasegawa, Kazuhiro ; Naiki, Hironobu ; Mohan Rao, Ch. ; Goto, Yuji (2005) Critical balance of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions is required for β2-Microglobulin amyloid fibril growth and stability Biochemistry, 44 (4). pp. 1288-1299. ISSN 0006-2960

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bi048029t?prev...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi048029t

Abstract

Investigation of factors that modulate amyloid formation of proteins is important to understand and mitigate amyloid-related diseases. To understand the role of electrostatic interactions and the effect of ionic cosolutes, especially anions, on amyloid formation, we have investigated the effect of salts such as NaCl, NaI, NaClO4, and Na2SO4 on the amyloid fibril growth of β2-microglobulin, the protein involved in dialysis-related amyloidosis. Under acidic conditions, these salts exhibit characteristic optimal concentrations where the fibril growth is favored. The presence of salts leads to an increase in hydrophobicity of the protein as reported by 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid, indicating that the anion interaction leads to the necessary electrostatic and hydrophobic balance critical for amyloid formation. However, high concentrations of salts tilt the balance to high hydrophobicity, leading to partitioning of the protein to amorphous aggregates. Such amorphous aggregates are not competent for fibril growth. The order of anions based on the lowest concentration at which fibril formation is favored is SO42- > ClO4- > I- > Cl-, consistent with the order of their electroselectivity series, suggesting that preferential anion binding, rather than general ionic strength effect, plays an important role in the amyloid fibril growth. Anion binding is also found to stabilize the amyloid fibrils under acidic condition. Interestingly, sulfate promotes amyloid growth of β2-microglobulin at pH between 5 and 6, closer to its isoelectric point. Considering the earlier studies on the role of glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans (i.e., sulfated polyanions) on amyloid formation, our study suggests that preferential interaction of sulfate ions with amyloidogenic proteins may have biological significance.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society.
ID Code:35516
Deposited On:16 Apr 2011 14:24
Last Modified:29 Nov 2011 10:07

Repository Staff Only: item control page