The Extracellular Molecular Chaperone Clusterin Inhibits Amyloid Fibril Formation and Suppresses Cytotoxicity Associated with Semen-Derived Enhancer of Virus Infection (SEVI).
Abigail K EliasMark R WilsonJohn A CarverIan F MusgravePublished in: Cells (2022)
Clusterin is a glycoprotein present at high concentrations in many extracellular fluids, including semen. Its increased expression accompanies disorders associated with extracellular amyloid fibril accumulation such as Alzheimer's disease. Clusterin is an extracellular molecular chaperone which prevents the misfolding and amorphous and amyloid fibrillar aggregation of a wide variety of unfolding proteins. In semen, amyloid fibrils formed from a 39-amino acid fragment of prostatic acid phosphatase, termed Semen-derived Enhancer of Virus Infection (SEVI), potentiate HIV infectivity. In this study, clusterin potently inhibited the in vitro formation of SEVI fibrils, along with dissociating them. Furthermore, clusterin reduced the toxicity of SEVI to pheochromocytoma-12 cells. In semen, clusterin may play an important role in preventing SEVI amyloid fibril formation, in dissociating SEVI fibrils and in mitigating their enhancement of HIV infection.
Keyphrases
- antiretroviral therapy
- human immunodeficiency virus
- transcription factor
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- hiv infected
- heat shock protein
- hepatitis c virus
- signaling pathway
- single molecule
- prostate cancer
- mouse model
- heat shock
- long non coding rna
- radical prostatectomy
- benign prostatic hyperplasia
- south africa
- solid state