The structural basis for Z α1-antitrypsin polymerization in the liver

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Faull S. V., Elliston E. L. K., Gooptu B., Jagger A. M., Aldobiyan I., Redzej A., Badaoui M., Heyer-Chauhan N., Tamir Rashid S., Reynolds G. M., Adams D. H., Miranda E., Orlova E. V., Irving J. A., Lomas D. A.
ISSN: 2375-2548

The serpinopathies are among a diverse set of conformational diseases that involve the aberrant self-association of proteins into ordered aggregates. α1-Antitrypsin deficiency is the archetypal serpinopathy and results from the formation and deposition of mutant forms of α1-antitrypsin as “polymer” chains in liver tissue. No detailed structural analysis has been performed of this material. Moreover, there is little information on the relevance of well-studied artificially induced polymers to these disease-associated molecules. We have isolated polymers from the liver tissue of Z α1-antitrypsin homozygotes (E342K) who have undergone transplantation, labeled them using a Fab fragment, and performed single-particle analysis of negative-stain electron micrographs. The data show structural equivalence between heat-induced and ex vivo polymers and that the intersubunit linkage is best explained by a carboxyl-terminal domain swap between molecules of α1-antitrypsin.

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