Prions as proteinaceous genetic material Michael D. Ter-Avanesyan
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Prions as proteinaceous genetic Prions as proteinaceous genetic materialmaterial
Michael D. Ter-Avanesyan
Michael D. Ter-Avanesyan

Fibrils form via autocatalytic non-covalent protein polymerization, accompanied by deep conformational rearrangement of polymerizing protein monomers
Have a specific cross-β structure, in which the β strands are perpendicular to the fibril axis, while β sheets formed by separate monomers are parallel to it
Rigid, insoluble in detergents, resistant to proteases, bind Congo red and thioflavine T
Amyloids
Yeast Sup35,
transmission electron
microscopy
β-2 microglobulin,Atomic force microscopy
Kajava et al., PNAS USA, 2004
Shewmaker et al., PNAS USA, 2006
2
2

Amyloid diseases
Transmissible (prion)amyloidoses:
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Gerstmann– Straussler–Scheinker disease
Fatal familial insomnia
Kuru
Sheep scrapie
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy
Non-transmissible (non-prion)amyloidoses:
Alzheimer disease
Parkinson disease
Huntington disease…
________________
~40 diseases
Infectious amyloids of the PrP protein Amyloid form of various unrelated proteins
3

Protein Organism Function of the amyloid fibrils
Curlin
Chaplins
Hydrophobin EAS
Sup35 and other prions
Spidroin
Proteins of the chorion of the eggshell
Neuron-specific isoform of CPEB
Pmel17
Escherichia coli (bacterium)
Streptomycescoelicolor
(bacterium)
Neurospora crassa (fungus)
fungi (mostly Saccharomyces
cerevisiae)
Nephila edulis (spider)
Bombyx mori (silkworm)
Aplisia californica (marine snail)
Homo sapiens
To colonize inert surfaces and mediate binding to host proteins
To lower the water surface tension and allow the development of aerial
hyphae
To lower the water surface tension and allow the development of aerial
hyphae
To underlay protein-based inheritance of traits
To form the silk fibers of the web
To protect the oocyte and the developing embryo from
environmental hazard
To promote long-term maintenance of synaptic changes associated with
memory storage
To form fibers upon which melanin granules form in melanosomes
Proteins forming functional amyloid fibrils
4

Primordial peptides prone to form amyloids
(scaffold structures)
Polypeptides evolved to acquire biologically
relevant globularstructure
Cells developed aggregation-clearing
mechanisms
5
Emergence of mechanisms preventing protein aggregation and amyloidogenesis
__________________________________________ Nowadays - amyloidogenic proteins can be both detrimental and beneficial

ACSACS
NLPR3 NLRP3
Caspase-1 filaments
Caspase-1
Lu et al., Cell, 2014
Amyloid-like polymers of ACS adaptor act as a platform for caspase activation
LRR
NBD
PYD
PYD
CARD
CARD
Caspasedomain
6

Role of amyloid in melanin polymerization(Pmel17 amyloid provides a scaffold for melanin synthesis)
From: Inge-Vechtomov et al., Prion, 2007
7

In mammals prions are proteinaceous infectious agents
In lower eukaryotes prions are proteinaceous genetic material
Wickner R, 1994. [URE3] as an altered URE2 protein: evidence for a prion analog in S. cerevisiae. Science, 264, 566-569
Bolton D., McKinley M., Prusiner S. 1982. Identification of protein that purifies with the scrapie prion. Science, 218, 1309-1311
8

Prions of lower eukaryotes
Organism Prion ProteinFunction of non-prion form of the
proteinManifestation
S. cerevisiae [PSI+] Sup35 Translation termination factor
Read through of nonsense codons
S. cerevisiae [URE3] Ure2 Regulator of nitrogen metabolism
Utilization of poorly assimilated nitrogen sources
S. cerevisiae [PIN+] Rnq1 Unknown Assistance in generation of other prions
S. cerevisiae [SWI+] Swi1 Transcriptional factor Sugar assimilation
S. cerevisiae [ISP+] Sfp1 Transcriptional factor Decrease of nonsense codon read through efficiency
S. cerevisiae [NUP100+] Nup100 Nucleoporin Transport of mRNAs and proteins across the nuclear
membrane
S. cerevisiae [OCT+] Cyc8 Transcriptional factor Utilization of lactate by cyc1Δ cells
S. cerevisiae [MOT3+] Mot3 Transcriptional factor Regulation of cell wall synthesis
S. cerevisiae [MOD+] Mod5tRNA
isopentiniltransferaseRegulation of sterol synthesis,
resistance to antifungal agents, regulation of sterol biosynthesis
P. anserina [Het-s] HET-s Control of vegetative incompatibility
Death of heterokaryons
9

10
Central dogma of molecular biology
F. Crick, Nature, 1970
(Information flow in biological systems)
DNA
RNA
Protein
FunctionFunction
Protein
Addition____________

[PSI+] determinant
[PSI+] manifests a nonsense suppressor phenotype
[PSI+] is inherited in a non-Mendelian fashion and can be transmitted from one cell to another with cytoplasm
No extrachromosomal DNA or RNA have been found to be associated with [PSI+]
[PSI+] can be efficiently eliminated by protein denaturing agent, guanidine hydrochloride, or by exposure to stress-inducing factors The curing of [PSI+] is reversible
HypothesisHypothesis
The [PSI+] phenotype reflects conversion of the Sup35 protein into a prion form related to its aggregation and functional inactivation
Wickner, Science, 1994
Cox, Heredity, 1965(Mendel, 1865)
11

The system for [PSI+] detection(Suppression of ade2 nonsense mutations)
mRNA
Translation
mRNA
Translation
mRNA
Translation
Wild type
Nonsense mutant
Suppression
**
**12

Domain structure of the Sup35 protein
Only N domain is required for [PSI+]
N M C
1 124 254 685
Structurally similar to translationelongation factor eEF1A
Essential for viability
Rich in: Gln, Asn Glu, Lys
Nonconservative
Nonessential for translation termination
and viability
mRNA
protein
ААА
Sup45/35
Sup45 (eRF1) andSup35 (eRF3) –translation termination factors
Ter-Avanesyan et al., Mol. Microbiol.,1993; Genetics,1994 13

Structural organization of the Sup35 fibril
Paushkin et al., Mol. Cell. Biol.,1997Baxa et al., Mol.Microbiol., 2011
14

Sup35 forms prion aggregates in [PSI+] cells
Paushkin et al., EMBO J., 1996; Science, 1997
Prion inheritance in vitro
Sup35[PSI+] is aggregated
Centrifugation
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
soluble pellet
ribosomes
[PSI+]
[psi-]
Sup35
[PSI+] pellet pellet pellet
psi- psi- psi- psi-
Sup35 is 400-fold mutiplicated in 4 cycles
Serial propagation of the [PSI+] prion
15

Prion transformation of yeast(Proof of the prion concept)
Tanaka, Weissman et al., Nature, 2004(Avery et al., J. Exptl. Med., 1944)
Sup35 polymers are infectious and underlie the [PSI+] determinant
Sup35NM was produced in E. coli, purified and polymerized in vitro
Yeast spheroplasts was co-transformed with Sup35 fibrils and a plasmid carrying the URA3 selectable marker
Transformation resulted in the appearance of clones with the [PSI+] phenotype (white color)
16

Role of chaperones in [PSI+] maintenance
Control SSA1 YDJ1SSA1+YDJ1 SSB1 HSP104
[PSI+PS]
[PSI+]
Overproduction of Ssa1, Ssb1 (Hsp70/DnaK) and Ydj1(Hsp40/DnaJ) chaperones can destabilize [PSI+]
Kryndushkin et al., J. Biol. Chem., 2002
17

Hsp104 plays a key role in [PSI+] maintenance
Hsp104 [PSI+] cannot propagate in the absence of Hsp104
ParadoxParadox:: Overproduction of Hsp104 also can cause [PSI+] loss
To explain the role of Hsp104, we relied on two considerations:
Sup35 prion particles have fibrillar shape
Hsp104 act on fibrils in the same way as on aggregates of thermally denatured proteins, i.e. disrupt them
Sup35 fibrils formedin vitro
Chernoff et. al., Science, 1995
18

The model of prion replication
Polymerization(only Sup35 is required)
Fragmentation(Hsp104 is required)
ParadoxParadox:: Hsp104, which has evolved for destruction of protein aggregates is essential for maintenance and inheritance of prion aggregates
Hsp104Sup35:
Kushnirov and Ter-Avanesyan, Cell, 1998
Hsp104-mediated fragmentation of prion particles multiplicates them which is necessary for their stable inheritance
19

Methods of prion particles analysis
Isolation of aggregates by centrifugation Microscopic observation of aggregated GFP hybrid proteins
Both methods do not allow to analyze the size of polymers
Sup35NM GFPGFP
Patino, Lindquist, Science, 1996
[PSI+] [psi-]
20

21
Electrophoretic analysis of prion polymers
MonomersSup35
StartPolymers
Sup35
0 25 50 70 10037 37 42SDS, % 2 2 2 5 2 2 2 2
Stability of Sup35 polymers in the presence of SDS
SDS disrupts aggregatesto polymers
Start
4200 (titin)
740 (nebulin)
205 (myosin)Sup35 monomers
kDa
[psi
-]
[PS
I+]
Kryndushkin et al., J. Biol. Chem., 2003
Polymer
Analysis of polymers in agarose gel with SDS

Hsp104 fragments prion polymers
Sup35мономер
Start
4200
740
205
kDa
0 1 2 3 Generations on GuHCl
1 2 3Hours after GuHCl
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Cell generations
Start
4200
740
205Sup35monomer
kDa
210 100 55 30 17 11 8 % Hsp104
The size of Sup35 polymer is a characteristic traitof the [PSI+] prion
Decrease in the level of Hsp104 causes increase of the polymer size
Both deletion of HSP104 and incubation of cells on medium with GuHCl cause loss of [PSI+]; GuHCl inhibitsinhibits Hsp104 activity
Kryndushkin et al., J. Biol. Chem., 200322

[PSI+] variants (“alleles”) differ in suppressor phenotype and the size of Sup35 polymers
Sup35 polymers corresponding to different [PSI+] variants differ by susceptibility to fragmentation by Hsp104
Hypothesis:
weak [PSI+]
weak [PSI+]
strong [PSI+]
[psi -] weak [PSI+]
strong [PSI+]
23
prionvariant: W S S S S W S S
[PSI+] [PSIPS+]
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
W - weak; S - strong

Insertion of tyrosine residues into the polyglutamine stretch enhances efficiency of polymer fragmentation
730
4000
KDa
25
Q4
5Q
51
Q5
6Q
65
Q7
0Q
13
1Q
30
QY
46
QY
50
QY
76
QY
12
0Q
Y
M CpolyQ/QY
(125) (254) (685)
polyQ: MSG-(QQQQQ)m-QSQGApolyQY: MSG-(QQQYQ)m-QSQGA
Sup35MC
polyQ/QY proteins
Polymers in SDS-agarose gel
Tyrosine residues stimulate fragmentation
Alexandrov et al., J. Biol. Chem., 2008
24

a.c./Protein Sup35 Rnq1 Ure3 Cyc8 Sfp1 Swi1 Mot3Average in
yeastY Tyr 16,13 5,93 0 0,57 1,27 1,72 3,7 3,4
W Trp 0 0 0 0 0 0,19 0 1
F Phe 3,23 3,56 2,35 0,57 0 4,39 1,23 4,5
A Ala 4,84 5,14 1,18 20,45 8,86 6,11 0 5,6
H His 0 1,58 1,18 2,27 7,59 0,76 0 2,1
S Ser 3,23 15,42 11,76 2,84 13,9 10,69 3,7 8,9
T Thr 0 0,79 5,88 1,7 8,86 7,63 0 5,9
C Cys 0 0 0 0 0 0,19 0 1,3
M Met 0,81 1,98 2,35 1,14 5,06 1,72 11,11 2,1
I Ile 0 0 3,53 1,14 5,06 4,01 1,23 6,5
V Val 0 0 4,71 2,27 0 2,86 1,23 5,6
N Asn 16,13 16,21 38,82 0,57 24,1 22,71 29,63 6,1
Q Gln 28,23 26,88 7,06 51,7 13,9 13,55 29,63 3,9
G Gly 16,13 16,6 5,88 1,7 1,27 2,48 7,41 5,1
K Lys* 1,61 0 1,18 0,57 2,53 3,24 0 7,3
R Arg 1,61 1,19 4,71 0,57 1,27 2,48 4,94 4,4
E Glu 0 1,19 3,53 0,57 0 2,29 1,23 6,5
D Asp* 1,61 0 2,35 0 1,27 2,67 1,23 5,8
P Pro 4,84 0,79 0 6,25 1,27 4,2 2,47 4,4
L Leu 1,61 2,77 3,53 5,11 3,8 6,11 1,23 9,5
Fra
gmen
tatio
n ef
ficie
ncy
Inhi
bit
poly
mer
izat
ion
Non-Q/N residues in yeast prion domains
25

Role of the exposed region of the Sup35 prion domain in fragmentation of polymers
Hypothesis:
Difference in [PSI+] phenotypes is related to variation in exposure of certain non-Q/N amino acids in prion domains
Alexandrov et al., PLoS One, 2012
26

Role of chaperones in fragmentation of Sup35 prion polymers
27

Origin of prion proteins in yeast: hypothesis
Background:
PolyQ domains can expand and contract
PolyQ often serve to mediate interaction between proteins
Expansion of polyQ stretches can result in toxicity of corresponding proteins while their contraction may inhibit biological function of these proteins
Insertion of non-Q/N amino acid residues into polyQ should stabilize their length and may decrease toxicity
Hypothesis:
Yeast prion domains may have derived from polyQ tracts via accumulation and amplification of mutations
Alexandrov, Ter-Avanesyan , Prion, 2013
28

Main contributors:
V. Kushnirov S. Paushkin (now in USA)
A. Alexandrov D. Kryndushkin (now in USA)
I. Alexandrov (now in USA)
Thank you for your attention
29

So
lub
le
frac
tio
n
So
lub
le
frac
tio
n
Pel
let
Pel
let
Sup35PS
Sup35
[PSI+PS]
[PSI+]
Hsp104: Wild type level Enhanced level
Excess of Hsp104 dissolves prion aggregates of Sup35 and decreases their size
Kushnirov et al., EMBO J., 2000
17


Sup35 forms prion aggregates in [PSI+] cells
Sup35[PSI+] is persistent to proteinase КSup35[PSI+] is aggregated
Centrifugation
8.0 4.0 2.0 1.0 0.4 0.2Proteinase K(mkg/ml)
Sup35 [PSI+]
[psi-]
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
soluble pellet
ribosomes
[PSI+]
[psi-]
Sup35
Paushkin et al., EMBO J., 1996
13

Prion inheritance in vitro
[PSI+] pellet pellet pellet
psi- psi- psi- psi-
Sup35 is 400-fold mutiplicated in 4 cycles
Paushkin et al., Science, 1997
Serial propagation of the [PSI+]prion
14

Origin of prion proteins in yeast: hypothesis
Background:
PolyQ domains can expand and contract
PolyQ often serve to mediate interaction between proteins
Expansion of polyQ stretches can result in toxicity of corresponding proteins while their contraction may inhibit biological function of these proteins
Insertion of non-Q/N amino acid residues into polyQ should stabilize their length and may decrease toxicity
Hypothesis:
Yeast prion domains could derive and evolve due to mutational insertion some amino acid residues into polyQ and their subsequent amplification
Alexandrov, Ter-Avanesyan , Prion, 2013
38

Molecular basis of inheritance of acquired traits
Proteinaceous genes
An addition to the central dogma of molecular biology
Prions in lower eukaryotes can be considered as:
5

How do proteinaceous genes determine phenotypic traits?
What kind of information they encode?
How do proteinaceous genes replicate?
What is the nature of their “alleles”?
What is the biological significance of prions (are they a bate or benefit)?
Prions as proteinaceous genes
7

[PSI+] variants (“alleles”) differ in suppressor phenotype and the size of Sup35 polymers
Sup35 polymers corresponding to different [PSI+] variants differ by susceptibility to fragmentation by Hsp104
Hypothesis:
weak [PSI+]
weak [PSI+]
strong [PSI+]
[psi -] weak [PSI+]
strong [PSI+]
22