Quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase inhibits prion formation

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase inhibits prion formation
المؤلفون: Yi-An, Zhan, Romany, Abskharon, Yu, Li, Jue, Yuan, Liang, Zeng, Johnny, Dang, Manuel Camacho, Martinez, Zerui, Wang, Jacqueline, Mikol, Sylvain, Lehmann, Shizhong, Bu, Jan, Steyaert, Li, Cui, Robert B, Petersen, Qingzhong, Kong, Gong-Xiang, Wang, Alexandre, Wohlkonig, Wen-Quan, Zou
المصدر: Aging (Albany NY)
سنة النشر: 2016
مصطلحات موضوعية: Protein Folding, Prions, animal diseases, Brain, scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma cells (ScN2a), nervous system diseases, Mice, Neuroblastoma, protein misfolding cyclic amplification, Cell Line, Tumor, Animals, Humans, recombinant prion protein, Oxidoreductases, Quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX), Scrapie, Research Paper
الوصف: Prions are infectious proteins that cause a group of fatal transmissible diseases in animals and humans. The scrapie isoform (PrPSc) of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) is the only known component of the prion. Several lines of evidence have suggested that the formation and molecular features of PrPSc are associated with an abnormal unfolding/refolding process. Quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) plays a role in protein folding by introducing disulfides into unfolded reduced proteins. Here we report that QSOX inhibits human prion propagation in protein misfolding cyclic amplification reactions and murine prion propagation in scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells. Moreover, QSOX preferentially binds PrPSc from prion-infected human or animal brains, but not PrPC from uninfected brains. Surface plasmon resonance of the recombinant mouse PrP (moPrP) demonstrates that the affinity of QSOX for monomer is significantly lower than that for octamer (312 nM vs 1.7 nM). QSOX exhibits much lower affinity for N-terminally truncated moPrP (PrP89-230) than for the full-length moPrP (PrP23-231) (312 nM vs 2 nM), suggesting that the N-terminal region of PrP is critical for the interaction of PrP with QSOX. Our study indicates that QSOX may play a role in prion formation, which may open new therapeutic avenues for treating prion diseases.
تدمد: 1945-4589
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=pmid________::d2fa432a1e3e3ae25f8a3664ee6e72b8Test
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27959866Test
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.pmid..........d2fa432a1e3e3ae25f8a3664ee6e72b8
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE