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The Gelsolin Pathogenic D187N Mutant Exhibits Altered Conformational Stability and Forms Amyloidogenic Oligomers
Gelsolin
is an actin-severing protein that attains an open functional
conformation in the presence of Ca<sup>2+</sup> or low pH. Mutations
(D187N/Y) in the second domain of gelsolin trigger the proteolytic
pathway producing amyloidogenic fragments that form the pathological
hallmark of gelsolin amyloidosis and lattice corneal dystrophy type
2 (LCD2). Here, we show that the D187N mutant gelsolin in a Ca<sup>2+</sup> depleted, low pH-activated, open conformation could assemble
into amyloidogenic oligomers without necessarily undergoing the specific
proteolytic step. Although both wild-type (WT) and mutant proteins
exhibit closely overlapping globular shapes at physiological conditions,
the latter exhibits subjugated actin depolymerization, loss of thermodynamic
stability, and folding cooperativity. Mutant gelsolin displayed aberrant
conformational unwinding and formed structural conformers with high
associative properties at low pH conditions. A SAXS intensity profile
and Guinier analysis of these conformers showed the formation of unusual,
higher order aggregates. Extended incubation at low pH resulted in
the formation of thioflavin T and Congo red positive, β-sheet
rich aggregates with a fibrillar, amyloid-like morphology visible
under electron and atomic force microscopy. Mass spectrometric analysis
of disaggregated end-stage fibrils displayed peptide fragments encompassing
the entire protein sequence, indicating the involvement of full length
mutant gelsolin in fibril formation. Atomistic and REMD simulations
indicated a larger increase in solvent accessibility and loss of fold
architecture in mutant gelsolin at low pH as compared to WT gelsolin.
Our findings support the existence of a secondary oligomerization-dependent
aggregation pathway associated with gelsolin amyloidosis and can pave
the way for better therapeutic strategies