Protein folding
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Correspondence: Kenneth Lee kenlee_fr@yahoo.fr
Genome Biology 2001, 2:spotlight-20010313-01 doi:10.1186/gb-spotlight-20010313-01
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at:
| Published: | 13 March 2001 |
© 2001 BioMed Central Ltd
Research news
The characteristic protein aggregates seen in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's or Creutzfeldt-Jakob diseases are caused by the proteins adopting abnormal shapes called amyloid fibrils. In the 8 March Nature, Christopher Dobson and colleagues at the Oxford Centre for Molecular Sciences, UK, report that proteins outside the brain are also capable of assuming abnormal 'amyloid' structures.
In a physiological environment the muscle protein myoglobin is globular and its structure does not suggest a tendency to form amyloid fibrils. But in a screening process in which temperature, pH and buffers were varied, Fändrich et al found a chemical environment - 50 mM sodium borate, pH 9.0 at 65°C - that favoured conversion of myoglobin from its native structure into amyloid fibrils (Nature 2001, 410:165-166). They believe that organisms have evolved safeguards against this protein transition, but ageing or mutational changes could sometimes cause the protective mechanisms to break down.
References
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[http://www.nature.com/nature/] webcite
Fändrich M, Fletcher MA, Dobson CM: Amyloid fibrils from muscle myoglobin. Nature 2001, 410:165-166.
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[http://www.ocms.ox.ac.uk/] webcite
Oxford Centre for Molecular Sciences