On the importance of being amidated: Analysis of the role of the conserved C-terminal amide of amylin in amyloid formation and cytotoxicity

BIOPHYSICAL CHEMISTRY(2024)

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摘要
The polypeptide hormone Amylin (also known as islet amyloid polypeptide) plays a role in regulation of glucose metabolism, but forms pancreatic islet amyloid deposits in type 2 diabetes. The process of islet amyloid formation contributes to beta-cell dysfunction and the development of the disease. Amylin is produced as a pro-from and undergoes processing prior to secretion. The mature hormone contains an amidated C-terminus. Analysis of an alignment of vertebrate amylin sequences reveals that the processing signal for amidation is strictly conserved. Furthermore, the enzyme responsible for C-terminal amidation is found in all of these organisms. Comparison of the physiologically relevant amidated form to a variant with a free C-terminus (Amylin-COO-) shows that replacement of the C-terminal amide with a carboxylate slows, but does not prevent amyloid formation. Pre-fibrillar species produced by both variants are toxic to cultured beta-cells, although hAmylin-COO- is moderately less so. Amyloid fibrils produced by either peptide are not toxic. Prior work (ACS Phoacol. Translational. Sci. 1, 132-49 (2018)) shows that Amylin- COO- exhibits a 58-fold reduction in activation of the Amylin1 receptor and 20-fold reduction in activation of the Amylin3 receptor. Thus, hAmylin-COO- exhibits significant toxicity, but significantly reduced activity and offers a reagent for studies which aim to decouple hAmylin's toxic effects from its activity. The different behaviours of free and C-terminal amidated Amylin should be considered when designing systems to produce the polypeptide recombinantly.
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关键词
Amidation,Amylin,Amyloid,beta-cells,Diabetes,Islet amyloid polypeptide
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