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June 3, 2002
Researchers find clues to the normal function of prion proteins
By Linley Erin Hall
All mammals produce a version of the prion protein, but scientists don't know what
it normally does. In an altered form, the prion protein becomes an infectious agent
that causes "mad cow disease" and its counterparts in other animals, including
humans. Researchers now suspect the normal prion protein plays a role in the transport
or regulation of copper in the body's tissues.
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"The prion protein is the only infectious protein that causes disease
in vertebrates."
--Glenn Millhauser
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"We all have the prion protein in us, but no one knows exactly what its usual
function is. In very rare instances it undergoes a change in conformation, and then
it causes disease," said Glenn Millhauser, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry
at UCSC.
Millhauser's group is working to understand both the normal and disease-causing forms
of the prion protein.
"The prion protein is the only infectious protein that causes disease in vertebrates.
Every time you look at it, you see something surprising," Millhauser said.
Proteins, which are linear chains of smaller molecules called amino acids, fold into
complex three-dimensional shapes to carry out their functions. The prion protein
sometimes folds into the wrong shape. Misfolded copies of the protein then act as
templates for normal prion proteins to refold incorrectly. These misfolded proteins
build up in the brain, causing memory loss, lack of coordination, dementia, and eventually
death. The human prion disease is called Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a variant of
which can be acquired by eating beef from a cow with bovine spongiform encephalopathy
(mad cow disease).
Although it is still a mystery what the protein normally does, scientists are getting
closer to the answer. To discover a protein's function, researchers usually create
a mutation in the corresponding gene and observe what goes wrong in lab animals.
But animals without a functional prion protein don't have severe medical problems.
Scientists got their first clue when they discovered that the prion protein binds
copper, a mineral essential to living systems in small amounts but toxic at high
concentrations. Copper has many functions, including helping the body absorb iron
and aiding in nerve and brain function. In humans, too little copper can cause anemia
and depression; too much can result in headaches, kidney damage, and psychological
problems. Animals without functional prion proteins experience tissue damage that
researchers believe is linked to a copper imbalance, but the effects are minimal
over the life span of most laboratory animals.
Millhauser has been working with colleagues at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine,
the Medical College of Wisconsin, UC Davis, and UC San Francisco to understand how
the prion protein interacts with copper ions. Their research has revealed tantalizing
new clues to the possible function of normal prion proteins and the factors involved
in misfolding. The group's latest results were published in a March 2002 issue of
the journal Biochemistry.
"Exploring copper regulation could lead to a new level of understanding of how
these prion diseases develop and how they cause degeneration of the nervous system,"
Millhauser said.
The prion protein binds copper in a domain that contains a series of eight amino
acids repeated four or more times. Other researchers had shown that each "octarepeat"
binds one copper ion. Millhauser's group found that only five amino acids out of
the eight are necessary for copper binding.
Working with UCSC chemist William Scott, Millhauser also determined the three-dimensional
structure of this short sequence bound to copper using a technique called x-ray crystallography.
He found that the copper binds to the backbone of the protein in two places and to
an amino acid side chain.
The group confirmed their results with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), a technique
that measures copper's absorption of microwaves while in a strong magnetic field.
The absorption strength indicates which atoms are bound to the copper. The EPR experiments
showed that the binding observed in the x-ray crystallography is the same when the
amino acid sequence is dissolved, as it would be in a cell, and when the amino acids
are part of the whole protein.
Metal binding to a protein backbone is extremely sensitive to changes in acidity.
If the prion protein's environment becomes acidic, the protein will release copper
bound to it. Thus, the prion protein may be part of a system to transport copper
in and out of cells using differences in acidity.
Alternatively, the prion protein could sense the copper concentration outside cells
and send a signal to a separate transport system. The amino acid glutamine is part
of the repeat sequence in all prion proteins, but it is not involved in copper binding.
Millhauser thinks the glutamine might send a signal to the cell when the protein
binds copper, perhaps by binding to glutamines in other prion proteins.
He also believes the glutamine could be important in the misfolding of prion proteins.
If glutamines from different prion proteins do bind, then other parts of the protein
can come into contact. If one of the proteins is misfolded, it could act as a template
for the other protein to become misfolded. Millhauser and Scott are now using x-ray
crystallography to examine copper binding to the entire protein and are performing
experiments to better understand the misfolding process.
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