Filaments of the Ure2p prion protein have a cross-beta core structure.

Journal of Structural Biology(2005)

引用 76|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Formation of filaments by the Ure2 protein constitutes the molecular mechanism of the [URE3] prion in yeast. According to the “amyloid backbone” model, the N-terminal asparagine-rich domains of Ure2p polymerize to form an amyloid core fibril that is surrounded by C-terminal domains in their native conformation. Protease resistance and Congo Red binding as well as β-sheet content detected by spectroscopy—all markers for amyloid—have supported this model, as has the close resemblance between 40Å N-domain fibrils and the fibrillar core of intact Ure2p filaments visualized by cryo-electron microscopy and scanning transmission electron microscopy. Here, we present electron diffraction and X-ray diffraction data from filaments of Ure2p, of N-domains alone, of fragments thereof, and of an N-domain-containing fusion protein that demonstrate in each case the 4.7Å reflection that is typical for cross-β structure and highly indicative of amyloid. This reflection was observed for specimens prepared by air-drying with and without sucrose embedding. To confirm that the corresponding structure is not an artifact of air-drying, the reflection was also demonstrated for specimens preserved in vitreous ice. Local area electron diffraction and X-ray diffraction from partially aligned specimens showed that the 4.7Å reflection is meridional and therefore the underlying structure is cross-β.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Electron diffraction,X-ray diffraction,Yeast prion,Natively unfolded protein
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要