Identifying the amylome, proteins capable of forming amyloid-like fibrils
Howard Hughes Medical Institute · University of California, Los Angeles · +1 more institution
Abstract
The amylome is the universe of proteins that are capable of forming amyloid-like fibrils. Here we investigate the factors that enable a protein to belong to the amylome. A major factor is the presence in the protein of a segment that can form a tightly complementary interface with an identical segment, which permits the formation of a steric zipper-two self-complementary beta sheets that form the spine of an amyloid fibril. Another factor is sufficient conformational freedom of the self-complementary segment to interact with other molecules. Using RNase A as a model system, we validate our fibrillogenic predictions by the 3D profile method based on the crystal structure of NNQQNY and demonstrate that a…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
4- LGLukasz GoldschmidtCorresponding
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Los Angeles
- PKPoh K. Teng
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Los Angeles
- RRRoland Riek
Board of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
- DEDavid Eisenberg
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Los Angeles
Topics & keywords
- Fibril
- Amyloid fibril
- Zipper
- Chemistry
- Amyloid (mycology)
- Biophysics
- Fibrillogenesis
- Protein folding
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions