Protein aggregation

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Protein aggregation is a biological phenomenon in which mis-folded proteins aggregate (i.e., accumulate and clump together) either intra- or extracellularly.[1][2] These protein aggregates are often toxic; protein aggregates have been implicated in a wide variety of disease known as amyloidoses, including ALS, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and prion disease.[3][4]

Introduction

After synthesis, proteins typically fold into a particular three-dimensional conformation: their native state. Only in their native state are they functional. This folding process is driven by the hydrophobic effect: a tendency for hydrophobic (i.e., “oil-ly”) portions of the protein to shield itself from the hydrophilic interior of the cell by burying into the interior of the protein. Thus, the exterior of a protein is typically hydrophilic, whereas the interior is typically hydrophobic.

However, newly synthesized proteins may not fold correctly, or properly folded proteins can spontaneously misfold. In these cases, if the cell does not assist the protein in re-folding, or degrade the unfolded protein, the unfolded protein may aggregate.[5][6] In this process, exposed hydrophobic portions of the unfolded protein may interact with the exposed hydrophobic patches of other unfolded proteins, spontaneously leading to protein aggregation.

Causes

Protein aggregation can occur due to a variety of causes. Individuals may have mutations that encode for proteins that are particularly sensitive to misfolding and aggregation. Alternatively, disruption of the pathways to refold proteins (chaperones) or to degrade misfolded proteins (the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway) may lead to protein aggregation. As many of the diseases associated with protein aggregation increase in frequency with age, it seems that cells lose the ability to clear misfolded proteins and aggregates over time. Several new studies suggest that protein aggregation is a second line of the cellular reaction to an imbalanced protein homeostasis rather than a harmful, random process.[7] A groundbreaking study[8] showed that sequestration of misfolded, aggregation-prone proteins into inclusion sites is an active organized cellular process, that depends on quality control components, such as HSPs and co-chaperones. Moreover, it was shown that eukaryotic cells have the ability to sort misfolded proteins in to two quality control compartments: 1. The JUNQ (JUxta Nuclear Quality control compartment). 2. The IPOD (Insoluble Protein Deposit). The partition into two quality control compartments is due to the different handling and processing of the different kinds of misfolded aggregative proteins: The IPOD serves as a sequestration site for non-ubiquitinated terminally aggregated proteins, such as the huntingtin protein. Under stress conditions, such as heat, when the cellular quality control machinery is saturated, ubiquitinated proteins are sorted to the JUNQ compartment, where they are eventually degraded. Thus, aggregation is a regulated, controlled process.

Protein aggregation and Ageing

The hypothesis that protein aggregation is a causative process in ageing is testable now since some models of delayed ageing are in hand. If the development of protein aggregates was an ageing independent process, slowing down aging will show no effect on the rate of proteotoxicity over time. However, if ageing is associated with decline in the activity of protective mechanisms against proteotoxicity, the slow aging models would show reduced aggregation and proteotoxicity. To address this problem several toxicity assays have been done in C. elegans. These studies indicated that reducing the activity of insulin/IGF signaling (IIS), a prominent aging regulatory pathway protects from neurodegeneration-linked toxic protein aggregation. The validity of this approach has been tested and confirmed in mammals as reducing the activity of the IGF-1 signaling pathway protected Alzheimer's model mice from the behavioral and biochemical impairments associated with the disease.[9]

Toxicity

Although it has been thought that the mature protein aggregates themselves are toxic, recent evidence suggests that it is in fact that immature protein aggregates are most toxic.[10][11] The hydrophobic patches of these aggregates can interact with other components of the cell and damage them. One hypothesis about how protein aggregates damage cells is through disruption of cell membranes. It is known that protein aggregates in vitro can destabilize artificial phospholipid bilayers, leading to permeabilization of the membrane.

See also

External links

References

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  7. http://www.nature.com/nrm/journal/v11/n11/full/nrm2993.html
  8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2746971/
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