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Neuroserpin and transthyretin are extracellular chaperones that preferentially inhibit amyloid formation

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posted on 2025-08-06, 05:23 authored by J West, Sandeep SatapathySandeep Satapathy, DR Whiten, Megan KellyMegan Kelly, Nicholas GeraghtyNicholas Geraghty, Emma-Jayne ProctorEmma-Jayne Proctor, P Sormanni, M Vendruscolo, JN Buxbaum, Marie RansonMarie Ranson, Mark WilsonMark Wilson
Neuroserpin is a secreted protease inhibitor known to inhibit amyloid formation by the Alzheimer’s beta peptide (Aβ). To test whether this effect was constrained to Aβ, we used a range of in vitro assays to demonstrate that neuroserpin inhibits amyloid formation by several different proteins and protects against the associated cytotoxicity but, unlike other known chaperones, has a poor ability to inhibit amorphous protein aggregation. Collectively, these results suggest that neuroserpin has an unusual chaperone selectivity for intermediates on the amyloid-forming pathway. Bioinformatics analyses identified a highly conserved 14-residue region containing an α helix shared between neuroserpin and the thyroxine-transport protein transthyretin, and we subsequently demonstrated that transthyretin also preferentially inhibits amyloid formation. Last, we used rationally designed neuroserpin mutants to demonstrate a direct involvement of the conserved 14-mer region in its chaperone activity. Identification of this conserved region may prove useful in the future design of anti-amyloid reagents.<p></p>

Funding

Defining systems that clear dangerous misfolded proteins from body fluids : Australian Research Council (ARC) | DP160100011

History

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    ISSN - Is published in 2375-2548 (Science Advances)
  3. 3.
    PMID - Has metadata PubMed 34890220

Journal title

Science Advances

Volume

7

Issue

50

Article/chapter number

ARTN eabf7606

Total pages

12

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE

Location

United States

Publication status

  • Published

Language

English

Associated Identifiers

grant.5127009 (dimensions-grant-id)