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Signal peptide stabilizes folding and inhibits misfolding of serum amyloid A.

Jin-Lin WuYun-Ru Chen
Published in: Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society (2022)
Signal peptide (SP) plays an important role in membrane targeting for insertion of secretory and membrane proteins during translocation processes in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Beside the targeting functions, SP has also been found to affect the stability and folding of several proteins. Serum amyloid A (SAA) proteins are apolipoproteins responding to acute-phase inflammation. The fibrillization of SAA results in a protein misfolding disease named amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis. The main disease-associated isoform of human SAA, SAA1.1, is expressed as a precursor protein with an N-terminal signal peptide composed of 18 residues. The cleavage of the SP generates mature SAA1.1. To investigate whether the SP affects properties of SAA1.1, we systematically examined the structure, protein stability, and fibrillization propensity of pre-SAA1.1, which possesses the SP, and Ser-SAA1.1 without the SP but containing with an additional N-terminal serine residue. We found that the presence of the SP did not significantly affect the predominant helical structure but changed the tertiary conformation as evidenced by intrinsic fluorescence and exposed hydrophobic surfaces. Pre-SAA1.1 and Ser-SAA1.1 formed distinct oligomeric assemblies in which pre-SAA1.1 populated as tetramer and octamer, whereas Ser-SAA1.1 existed as a predominant hexamer. Pre-SAA1.1 was found significantly more stable than Ser-SAA1.1 upon thermal and chemical unfolding. Ser-SAA1.1, but not pre-SAA1.1, is capable of forming amyloid fibrils in protein misfolding study, indicating a protective role of the SP. Altogether, our results demonstrated a novel role of the SP in SAA folding and misfolding and provided a novel direction for therapeutic development of AA amyloidosis.
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