학술논문

Anti-PolyQ Antibodies Recognize a Short PolyQ Stretch in Both Normal and Mutant Huntingtin Exon 1
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Molecular Biology. 427(15)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Brain Disorders
Huntington's Disease
Neurodegenerative
Neurosciences
Prevention
Rare Diseases
Orphan Drug
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Amino Acid Sequence
Antibodies
Monoclonal
Binding Sites
Chromatography
Gel
Drug Design
Epitopes
Exons
Humans
Huntingtin Protein
Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments
Models
Molecular
Nerve Tissue Proteins
Peptides
Protein Binding
Protein Conformation
Protein Multimerization
equilibrium gel-filtration
Huntington's disease
linear lattice
polyglutamine
small-angle X-ray scattering
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Microbiology
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
Huntington's disease is caused by expansion of a polyglutamine (polyQ) repeat in the huntingtin protein. A structural basis for the apparent transition between normal and disease-causing expanded polyQ repeats of huntingtin is unknown. The "linear lattice" model proposed random-coil structures for both normal and expanded polyQ in the preaggregation state. Consistent with this model, the affinity and stoichiometry of the anti-polyQ antibody MW1 increased with the number of glutamines. An opposing "structural toxic threshold" model proposed a conformational change above the pathogenic polyQ threshold resulting in a specific toxic conformation for expanded polyQ. Support for this model was provided by the anti-polyQ antibody 3B5H10, which was reported to specifically recognize a distinct pathologic conformation of soluble expanded polyQ. To distinguish between these models, we directly compared binding of MW1 and 3B5H10 to normal and expanded polyQ repeats within huntingtin exon 1 fusion proteins. We found similar binding characteristics for both antibodies. First, both antibodies bound to normal, as well as expanded, polyQ in huntingtin exon 1 fusion proteins. Second, an expanded polyQ tract contained multiple epitopes for fragments antigen-binding (Fabs) of both antibodies, demonstrating that 3B5H10 does not recognize a single epitope specific to expanded polyQ. Finally, small-angle X-ray scattering and dynamic light scattering revealed similar binding modes for MW1 and 3B5H10 Fab-huntingtin exon 1 complexes. Together, these results support the linear lattice model for polyQ binding proteins, suggesting that the hypothesized pathologic conformation of soluble expanded polyQ is not a valid target for drug design.