Deamidation Accelerates Amyloid Formation and Alters Amylin Fiber Structure

TitleDeamidation Accelerates Amyloid Formation and Alters Amylin Fiber Structure
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsDunkelberger, EB, Buchanan, LE, Marek, P, Cao, P, Raleigh, DP, Zanni, MT
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume134
Pagination12658-12667
Date PublishedAug
Type of ArticleArticle
ISBN Number0002-7863
Accession NumberWOS:000306942600060
Keywords2-dimensional ir spectroscopy, alzheimers-disease, gamma-d-crystallin, human iapp, iger t, 1987, journal of biological chemistry, v262, p785, infrared-spectroscopy, injection-drug product, isoaspartate formation, peptide conformation, polypeptide, protein posttranslational modifications
Abstract

Deamidation of asparagine and glutamine is the most common nonenzymatic, post-translational modification. Deamidation can influence the structure, stability, folding, and aggregation of proteins and has been proposed to play a role in amyloid formation. However there are no structural studies of the consequences of deamidation on amyloid fibers, in large part because of the difficulty of studying these materials using conventional methods. Here we examine the effects of deamidation on the kinetics of amyloid formation by amylin, the causative agent of type 2 diabetes. We find that deamidation accelerates amyloid formation and the deamidated material is able to seed amyloid formation by unmodified amylin. Using site-specific isotope labeling and two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy, we show that fibers formed by samples that contain deamidated polypeptide contain reduced amounts of beta-sheet. Deamidation leads to disruption of the N-terminal beta-sheet between Ala-8 and Ala-13, but beta-sheet is still retained near Leu-16. The C-terminal sheet is disrupted near Leu-27. Analysis of potential sites of deamidation together with structural models of amylin fibers reveals that deamidation in the N-terminal beta-sheet region may be the cause for the disruption of the fiber structure at both the N- and C-terminal beta-sheet. Thus, deamidation is a post-translational modification that creates fibers that have an altered structure but can still act as a template for amylin aggregation. Deamidation is very difficult to detect with standard methods used to follow amyloid formation, but isotope-labeled IR spectroscopy provides a means for monitoring sample degradation and investigating the structural consequences of deamidation.

Short TitleJ. Am. Chem. Soc.