Natural and amyloid self-assembly of S100 proteins: structural basis of functional diversity


Autoria(s): Fritz, Günter; Botelho, Hugo M.; Morozova-Roche, Ludmilla A.; Gomes, Cláudio M.
Data(s)

05/04/2011

05/04/2011

28/10/2010

Resumo

The S100 proteins are 10-12 kDa EF-hand proteins that act as central regulators in a multitude of cellular processes including cell survival, proliferation, differentiation and motility. Consequently, many S100 proteins are implicated and display marked changes in their expression levels in many types of cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. The structure and function of S100 proteins are modulated by metal ions via Ca2+ binding through EF-hand motifs and binding of Zn2+ and Cu2+ at additional sites, usually at the homodimer interfaces. Ca2+ binding modulates S100 conformational opening and thus promotes and affects the interaction with p53, the receptor for advanced glycation endproducts and Toll-like receptor 4, among many others. Structural plasticity also occurs at the quaternary level, where several S100 proteins self-assemble into multiple oligomeric states, many being functionally relevant. Recently, we have found that the S100A8/A9 proteins are involved in amyloidogenic processes in corpora amylacea of prostate cancer patients, and undergo metal-mediated amyloid oligomerization and fibrillation in vitro. Here we review the unique chemical and structural properties of S100 proteins that underlie the conformational changes resulting in their oligomerization upon metal ion binding and ultimately in functional control. The possibility that S100 proteins have intrinsic amyloid-forming capacity is also addressed, as well as the hypothesis that amyloid self-assemblies may, under particular physiological conditions, affect the S100 functions within the cellular milieu.

Identificador

Fritz, G., Botelho, H. M., Morozova-Roche, L. A., and Gomes, C. M. (2010) Natural and amyloid self-assembly of S100 proteins: structural basis of functional diversity, Febs J 277, 4578-4590

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/5450

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Wiley

Direitos

restricted

Palavras-Chave #amyloid #fibril #function #metal ions #misfolding #oligomer #self-assembly #structure #S100 proteins
Tipo

article