Cellular prion protein gene polymorphisms linked to differential scrapie susceptibility correlate with distinct residue connectivity between secondary structure elements.

Cellular prion protein gene polymorphisms linked to differential scrapie susceptibility correlate with distinct residue connectivity between secondary structure elements.

Soto, Patricia;Claflin, India A;Bursott, Alyssa L;Schwab-McCoy, Aimee D;Bartz, Jason C;
Journal of biomolecular structure & dynamics 2020 pp. 1-11
276
soto2020cellularjournal

Abstract

The conformational conversion of the cellular prion protein (PrP) to the misfolded and aggregated isoform, termed scrapie prion protein (PrP), is key to the development of a group of neurodegenerative diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). Although the conversion mechanism is not fully understood, the role of gene polymorphisms in varying susceptibilities to prion diseases is well established. In ovine, specific gene polymorphisms in PrP alter prion disease susceptibility: the Valine136-Glutamine171 variant ( structure) displays high susceptibility to classical scrapie while the Alanine136-Arginine171 variant ( structure) displays reduced susceptibility. The opposite trend has been reported in atypical scrapie. Despite the differentiation between classical and atypical scrapie, a complete understanding of the effect of polymorphisms on the structural dynamics of PrP is lacking. From our structural bioinformatics study, we propose that polymorphisms locally modulate the network of residue interactions in the globular C-terminus of the ovine recombinant prion protein while maintaining the overall fold. Although the two variants we examined exhibit a densely connected group of residues that includes both β-sheets, the β2-α2 loop and the N-terminus of α-helix 2, only in the structure do most residues of α-helix 2 belong to this group. We identify the structural role of Valine136Alanine and Glutamine171Arginine: modulation of residue interaction networks that affect the connectivity between α-helix 2 and α-helix 3. We propose blocking interactions of residue 171 as a potential target for the design of therapeutics to prevent efficient PrP misfolding. We discuss our results in the context of initial PrP conversion and extrapolate to recently proposed PrP structures.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.

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10.1080/07391102.2019.1708794
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