Toxicity of Protein Oligomers Is Rationalized by a
Function Combining Size and Surface Hydrophobicity
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Abstract
The misfolding and aberrant assembly
of peptides and proteins into
fibrillar aggregates is the hallmark of many pathologies. Fibril formation
is accompanied by oligomeric species thought to be the primary pathogenic
agents in many of these diseases. With the aim of identifying the
structural determinants responsible for the toxicity of misfolded
oligomers, we created 12 oligomeric variants from the N-terminal domain
of the <i>E. coli</i> HypF protein (HypF-N) by replacing
one or more charged amino acid residues with neutral apolar residues
and allowing the mutated proteins to aggregate under two sets of conditions.
The resulting oligomeric species have different degrees of cytotoxicity
when added to the extracellular medium of the cells, as assessed by
the extent of 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium
bromide (MTT) reduction, apoptosis, and influx of Ca<sup>2+</sup> into
the cells. The structural properties of the oligomeric variants were
characterized by evaluating their surface hydrophobicity with 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate
(ANS) binding and by measuring their size by means of turbidimetry
as well as light scattering. We find that increases in the surface
hydrophobicity of the oligomers following mutation can promote the
formation of larger assemblies and that the overall toxicity correlates
with a combination of both surface hydrophobicity and size, with the
most toxic oligomers having high hydrophobicity and small size. These
results have allowed the relationships between these three parameters
to be studied simultaneously and quantitatively, and have enabled
the generation of an equation that is able to rationalize and even
predict toxicity of the oligomers resulting from their surface hydrophobicity
and size