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  4. Hsp104 targets multiple intermediates on the amyloid pathway and suppresses the seeding capacity of Abeta fibrils and protofibrils
 
research article

Hsp104 targets multiple intermediates on the amyloid pathway and suppresses the seeding capacity of Abeta fibrils and protofibrils

Arimon, Muriel
•
Grimminger, Valerie  
•
Sanz, Fausto
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2008
Journal of Molecular Biology

The heat shock protein Hsp104 has been reported to possess the ability to modulate protein aggregation and toxicity and to "catalyze" the disaggregation and recovery of protein aggregates, including amyloid fibrils, in yeast, Escherichia coli, mammalian cell cultures, and animal models of Huntington's disease and Parkinson's disease. To provide mechanistic insight into the molecular mechanisms by which Hsp104 modulates aggregation and fibrillogenesis, the effect of Hsp104 on the fibrillogenesis of amyloid beta (Abeta) was investigated by characterizing its ability to interfere with oligomerization and fibrillogenesis of different species along the amyloid-formation pathway of Abeta. To probe the disaggregation activity of Hsp104, its ability to dissociate preformed protofibrillar and fibrillar aggregates of Abeta was assessed in the presence and in the absence of ATP. Our results show that Hsp104 inhibits the fibrillization of monomeric and protofibrillar forms of Abeta in a concentration-dependent but ATP-independent manner. Inhibition of Abeta fibrillization by Hsp104 is observable up to Hsp104/Abeta stoichiometric ratios of 1:1000, suggesting a preferential interaction of Hsp104 with aggregation intermediates (e.g., oligomers, protofibrils, small fibrils) on the pathway of Abeta amyloid formation. This hypothesis is consistent with our observations that Hsp104 (i) interacts with Abeta protofibrils, (ii) inhibits conversion of protofibrils into amyloid fibrils, (iii) arrests fibril elongation and reassembly, and (iv) abolishes the capacity of protofibrils and sonicated fibrils to seed the fibrillization of monomeric Abeta. Together, these findings suggest that the strong inhibition of Abeta fibrillization by Hsp104 is mediated by its ability to act at different stages and target multiple intermediates on the pathway to amyloid formation.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.jmb.2008.09.063
Web of Science ID

WOS:000262016600013

PubMed ID

18851977

Author(s)
Arimon, Muriel
Grimminger, Valerie  
Sanz, Fausto
Lashuel, Hilal A.  
Date Issued

2008

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Journal of Molecular Biology
Volume

384

Issue

5

Start page

1157

End page

73

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LMNN  
Available on Infoscience
October 28, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/43944
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