Formation of extramembrane β -strands controls dimerization of transmembrane helices in amyloid precursor protein C99.
George A PantelopulosDaisuke MatsuokaJames M HutchisonCharles R SandersYuji SugitaJohn E StraubD ThirumalaiPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
The 99-residue C-terminal domain of amyloid precursor protein (APP-C99), precursor to amyloid beta (A β ), is a transmembrane (TM) protein containing intrinsically disordered N- and C-terminal extramembrane domains. Using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we show that the structural ensemble of the C99 monomer is best described in terms of thousands of states. The C99 monomer has a propensity to form β -strand in the C-terminal extramembrane domain, which explains the slow spin relaxation times observed in paramagnetic probe NMR experiments. Surprisingly, homodimerization of C99 not only narrows the conformational ensemble from thousands to a few states through the formation of metastable β -strands in extramembrane domains but also stabilizes extramembrane α -helices. The extramembrane domain structure is observed to dramatically impact the homodimerization motif, resulting in the modification of TM domain conformations. Our study provides an atomic-level structural basis for communication between the extramembrane domains of the C99 protein and TM homodimer formation. This finding could serve as a general model for understanding the influence of disordered extramembrane domains on TM protein structure.