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Local unfolding of Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase monomer determines the morphology of fibrillar aggregates.

Journal of molecular biology | 2012

Aggregation of Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is often found in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients. The fibrillar aggregates formed by wild type and various disease-associated mutants have recently been found to have distinct cores and morphologies. Previous computational and experimental studies of wild-type SOD1 suggest that the apo-monomer, highly aggregation prone, displays substantial local unfolding dynamics. The residual folded structure of locally unfolded apoSOD1 corresponds to peptide segments forming the aggregation core as identified by a combination of proteolysis and mass spectroscopy. Therefore, we hypothesize that the destabilization of apoSOD1 caused by various mutations leads to distinct local unfolding dynamics. The partially unfolded structure, exposing the hydrophobic core and backbone hydrogen bond donors and acceptors, is prone to aggregate. The peptide segments in the residual folded structures form the "building block" for aggregation, which in turn determines the morphology of the aggregates. To test this hypothesis, we apply a multiscale simulation approach to study the aggregation of three typical SOD1 variants: wild type, G37R, and I149T. Each of these SOD1 variants has distinct peptide segments forming the core structure and features different aggregate morphologies. We perform atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to study the conformational dynamics of apoSOD1 monomer and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to study the aggregation of partially unfolded SOD1 monomers. Our computational studies of monomer local unfolding and the aggregation of different SOD1 variants are consistent with experiments, supporting the hypothesis of the formation of aggregation "building blocks" via apo-monomer local unfolding as the mechanism of SOD1 fibrillar aggregation.

Pubmed ID: 22210350 RIS Download

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Associated grants

  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 GM080742-04
  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 GM080742-03S1
  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 GM080742-03
  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 GM080742
  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 GM080742-05

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WHAM (tool)

RRID:SCR_005497

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on February 28,2023. High-throughput sequence alignment tool that aligns short DNA sequences (reads) to the whole human genome at a rate of over 1500 million 60bps reads per hour, which is one to two orders of magnitudes faster than the leading state-of-the-art techniques. Feature list for the current version (v 0.1.5) of WHAM: * Supports paired-end reads * Supports up to 5 errores * Supports alignments with gaps * Supports quality scores for filtering invalid alignments, and sorting valid alignments * finds ALL valid alignments * Supports multi-threading * Supports rich reporting modes * Supports SAM format output

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