Membrane composition and lipid to protein ratio modulate amyloid kinetics of yeast prion protein†
Abstract
Understanding of prion aggregation in a membrane environment may help to ameliorate neurodegenerative complications caused by the amyloid forms of prions. Here, we investigated the membrane binding-induced aggregation of yeast prion protein Sup35. Using the combination of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) at single molecule resolution and other biophysical studies, we establish that lipid composition and lipid/protein ratio are key modulators of the aggregation kinetics of Sup35. In the presence of a zwitterionic membrane (DMPC), Sup35 exhibited novel biphasic aggregation kinetics at lipid/protein ratios ranging between 20 : 1 and 70 : 1 (termed here as the optimum lipid concentration, OLC). In ratios below (low lipid concentration, LLC) and above (ELC, excess lipid concentration) that range, the aggregation was found to be monophasic. In contrast, in the presence of negatively charged membranes, we did not observe any bi-phasic aggregation kinetics in the entire range of protein to lipid ratios. Our results provide a mechanistic description of the role that membrane concentration/composition-modulated aggregation may play in neurodegenerative diseases.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Exploring proteins and their interactions and RSC Chemical Biology Transparent Peer Review Collection