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The structural basis for Z α 1 -antitrypsin polymerization in the liver
Author(s) -
Sarah V. Faull,
Emma Elliston,
Bibek Gooptu,
Alistair M. Jagger,
Ibrahim Aldobiyan,
Adam Redzej,
Magd Badaoui,
Nina HeyerChauhan,
S. Tamir Rashid,
Gary Reynolds,
David H. Adams,
Elena Miranda,
Elena V. Orlova,
James A. Irving,
David A. Lomas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.abc1370
Subject(s) - polymer , chemistry , monomer , molecule , mutant , polymerization , negative stain , ex vivo , biophysics , biochemistry , electron microscope , biology , in vitro , organic chemistry , gene , physics , optics
The serpinopathies are among a diverse set of conformational diseases that involve the aberrant self-association of proteins into ordered aggregates. α 1 -Antitrypsin deficiency is the archetypal serpinopathy and results from the formation and deposition of mutant forms of α 1 -antitrypsin as "polymer" chains in liver tissue. No detailed structural analysis has been performed of this material. Moreover, there is little information on the relevance of well-studied artificially induced polymers to these disease-associated molecules. We have isolated polymers from the liver tissue of Z α 1 -antitrypsin homozygotes (E342K) who have undergone transplantation, labeled them using a Fab fragment, and performed single-particle analysis of negative-stain electron micrographs. The data show structural equivalence between heat-induced and ex vivo polymers and that the intersubunit linkage is best explained by a carboxyl-terminal domain swap between molecules of α 1 -antitrypsin.

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