The Stabilization of S100A9 Structure by Calcium Inhibits the Formation of Amyloid Fibrils

Author:

Sanders Ella1,Csondor Rebecca1ORCID,Šulskis Darius2ORCID,Baronaitė Ieva2ORCID,Smirnovas Vytautas2ORCID,Maheswaran Luckshi1,Horrocks Jack1,Munro Rory1,Georgiadou Christina1ORCID,Horvath Istvan3ORCID,Morozova-Roche Ludmilla A.3ORCID,Williamson Philip T. F.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK

2. Sector of Amyloid Research, Institute of Biotechnology, Life Sciences Centre, Vilnius University, LT-10257 Vilnius, Lithuania

3. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Umeå University, SE-90187 Umeå, Sweden

Abstract

The calcium-binding protein S100A9 is recognized as an important component of the brain neuroinflammatory response to the onset and development of neurodegenerative disease. S100A9 is intrinsically amyloidogenic and in vivo co-aggregates with amyloid-β peptide and α-synuclein in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, respectively. It is widely accepted that calcium dyshomeostasis plays an important role in the onset and development of these diseases, and studies have shown that elevated levels of calcium limit the potential for S100A9 to adopt a fibrillar structure. The exact mechanism by which calcium exerts its influence on the aggregation process remains unclear. Here we demonstrate that despite S100A9 exhibiting α-helical secondary structure in the absence of calcium, the protein exhibits significant plasticity with interconversion between different conformational states occurring on the micro- to milli-second timescale. This plasticity allows the population of conformational states that favour the onset of fibril formation. Magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR studies of the resulting S100A9 fibrils reveal that the S100A9 adopts a single structurally well-defined rigid fibrillar core surrounded by a shell of approximately 15–20 mobile residues, a structure that persists even when fibrils are produced in the presence of calcium ions. These studies highlight how the dysregulation of metal ion concentrations can influence the conformational equilibria of this important neuroinflammatory protein to influence the rate and nature of the amyloid deposits formed.

Funder

Swedish Medical Research Council

Gerald Kerkutt Trust

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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