A natively unfolded yeast prion monomer adopts an ensemble of collapsed and rapidly fluctuating structures
- Samrat Mukhopadhyay*,
- Rajaraman Krishnan†,
- Edward A. Lemke*,
- Susan Lindquist†,‡, and
- Ashok A. Deniz*,‡
- *Department of Molecular Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037; and
- †Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142
-
Contributed by Susan Lindquist, December 22, 2006 (received for review December 5, 2006)
Abstract
The yeast prion protein Sup35 is a translation termination factor, whose activity is modulated by sequestration into a self-perpetuating amyloid. The prion-determining domain, NM, consists of two distinct regions: an amyloidogenic N terminus domain (N) and a charged solubilizing middle region (M). To gain insight into prion conversion, we used single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (SM-FRET) and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy to investigate the structure and dynamics of monomeric NM. Low protein concentrations in these experiments prevented the formation of obligate on-pathway oligomers, allowing us to study early folding intermediates in isolation from higher-order species. SM-FRET experiments on a dual-labeled amyloid core variant (N21C/S121C, retaining wild-type prion behavior) indicated that the N region of NM adopts a collapsed form similar to “burst-phase” intermediates formed during the folding of many globular proteins, even though it lacks a typical hydrophobic core. The mean distance between residues 21 and 121 was ≈43 Å. This increased with denaturant in a noncooperative fashion to ≈63 Å, suggesting a multitude of interconverting species rather than a small number of discrete monomeric conformers. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy analysis of singly labeled NM revealed fast conformational fluctuations on the 20- to 300-ns time scale. Quenching from proximal and distal tyrosines resulted in distinct fast and slower fluctuations. Our results indicate that native monomeric NM is composed of an ensemble of structures, having a collapsed and rapidly fluctuating N region juxtaposed with a more extended M region. The stability of such ensembles is likely to play a key role in prion conversion.
Footnotes
- ‡To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: deniz{at}scripps.edu or lindquist_admin{at}wi.mit.edu
-
Author contributions: S.M., R.K., S.L., and A.A.D. designed research; S.M., R.K., and E.A.L. performed research; S.M., R.K., E.A.L., S.L., and A.A.D. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; S.M., R.K., E.A.L., S.L., and A.A.D. analyzed data; and S.M., R.K., S.L., and A.A.D. wrote the paper.
-
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
-
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0611503104/DC1.
- Abbreviations:
- SM-FRET,
- single-molecule FRET;
- FCS,
- fluorescence correlation spectroscopy.
- © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





