The
formation of misfolded protein oligomers during early stages
of amyloid aggregation and the activation of neuroinflammatory responses
are two key events associated with neurodegenerative diseases. Although
it has been established that misfolded oligomers are involved in the
neuroinflammatory process, the links between their structural features
and their functional effects on the immune response remain unknown.
To explore such links, we took advantage of two structurally distinct
soluble oligomers (type A and B) of protein HypF-N and compared the
elicited microglial inflammatory responses. By using confocal microscopy,
protein pull-down, and high-throughput mass spectrometry, we found
that, even though both types bound to a common pool of microglial
proteins, type B oligomerswith a lower solvent-exposed hydrophobicityshowed
enhanced protein binding, correlating with the observed inflammatory
response. Furthermore, the interactome associated with inflammatory-mediated
neurodegeneration revealed previously unidentified receptors and signaling
molecules likely to be involved in the oligomer-elicited innate immune
response