Premium
Increase in the conformational flexibility of β 2 ‐microglobulin upon copper binding: A possible role for copper in dialysis‐related amyloidosis
Author(s) -
Villanueva James,
Hoshino Masaru,
Katou Hidenori,
Kardos József,
Hasegawa Kazuhiro,
Naiki Hironobu,
Goto Yuji
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1110/ps.03445704
Subject(s) - heteronuclear molecule , chemistry , crystallography , population , beta (programming language) , biophysics , molecule , copper , stereochemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , demography , organic chemistry , sociology , computer science , biology , programming language
A key pathological event in dialysis‐related amyloidosis is the fibril formation of β 2 ‐microglobulin (β2‐m). Because β2‐m does not form fibrils in vitro, except under acidic conditions, predisposing factors that may drive fibril formation at physiological pH have been the focus of much attention. One factor that may be implicated is Cu 2+ binding, which destabilizes the native state of β2‐m and thus stabilizes the amyloid precursor. To address the Cu 2+ ‐induced destabilization of β2‐m at the atomic level, we studied changes in the conformational dynamics of β2‐m upon Cu 2+ binding. Titration of β2‐m with Cu 2+ monitored by heteronuclear NMR showed that three out of four histidines (His13, His31, and His51) are involved in the binding at pH 7.0. 1 H‐ 15 N heteronuclear NOE suggested increased backbone dynamics for the residues Val49 to Ser55, implying that the Cu 2+ binding at His51 increased the local dynamics of β‐strand D. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange of amide protons showed increased flexibility of the core residues upon Cu 2+ binding. Taken together, it is likely that Cu 2+ binding increases the pico‐ to nanosecond fluctuation of the β‐strand D on which His51 exists, which is propagated to the core of the molecule, thus promoting the global and slow fluctuations. This may contribute to the overall destabilization of the molecule, increasing the equilibrium population of the amyloidogenic intermediate.