A novel hotspot of gelsolin instability and aggregation propensity triggers a new mechanism of amyloidosis
Michela Bollati, Luisa Diomede, Toni Giorgino, Carmina Natale, Elisa, Fagnani, Irene Boniardi, Alberto Barbiroli, Rebecca Alemani, Marten Beeg,, Marco Gobbi, Ana Fakin, Eloise Mastrangelo, Mario Milani, Gianluca, Presciuttini, Edi Gabellieri, Patrizia Cioni, Matteo de Rosa

TL;DR
This study uncovers a new mechanism of gelsolin amyloidosis involving destabilization at the G4-G5 interface, leading to furin-independent aggregation and increased proteotoxicity, expanding understanding beyond the canonical pathway.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes novel mutations at the G4-G5 interface that promote aggregation through a non-canonical pathway, distinct from previously known mechanisms.
Findings
Mutations impair temperature and pressure stability of gelsolin.
Variants show higher aggregation tendency in unproteolysed forms.
Structural destabilization of G4-G5 interface triggers non-canonical aggregation.
Abstract
The multidomain protein gelsolin (GSN) is composed of six homologous modules, sequentially named G1 to G6. Single point substitutions in this protein are responsible for AGel amyloidosis, a hereditary disease characterized by progressive corneal lattice dystrophy, cutis laxa, and polyneuropathy. Several different amyloidogenic variants of GSN have been identified over the years, but only the most common D187N/Y mutants, in G2, have been thoroughly characterized, and the underlying functional mechanistic link between mutation, altered protein structure, susceptibility to aberrant furin cleavage and aggregative potential resolved. Little is known about the recently identified mutations A551P, E553K and M517R hosted at the interface between G4 and G5, whose aggregation process likely follows an alternative pathway. We demonstrate that these three substitutions impair temperature and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAlzheimer's disease research and treatments · Amyloidosis: Diagnosis, Treatment, Outcomes · Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease
