Membrane Interactions Accelerate the Self-Aggregation of Huntingtin Exon 1 Fragments in a Polyglutamine Length-Dependent Manner

Author:

Marquette Arnaud,Aisenbrey Christopher,Bechinger BurkhardORCID

Abstract

The accumulation of aggregated protein is a typical hallmark of many human neurodegenerative disorders, including polyglutamine-related diseases such as chorea Huntington. Misfolding of the amyloidogenic proteins gives rise to self-assembled complexes and fibres. The huntingtin protein is characterised by a segment of consecutive glutamines which, when exceeding ~ 37 residues, results in the occurrence of the disease. Furthermore, it has also been demonstrated that the 17-residue amino-terminal domain of the protein (htt17), located upstream of this polyglutamine tract, strongly correlates with aggregate formation and pathology. Here, we demonstrate that membrane interactions strongly accelerate the oligomerisation and β-amyloid fibril formation of htt17-polyglutamine segments. By using a combination of biophysical approaches, the kinetics of fibre formation is investigated and found to be strongly dependent on the presence of lipids, the length of the polyQ expansion, and the polypeptide-to-lipid ratio. Finally, the implications for therapeutic approaches are discussed.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

RTRA Chemistry of Complex Systems

CHDI Foundation

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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