PMID: 21131979 , Related PDB ids: 3LOW, 3LOZ
Authors:
Liu C, Sawaya MR, Eisenberg D
Title:
beta-microglobulin forms three-dimensional domain-swapped amyloid fibrils with disulfide linkages.
Journal:
Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2011 Jan;18(1):49-55. Epub 2010 Dec 5.
Abstract:
beta-microglobulin (betam) is the light chain of the type I major histocompatibility complex. It deposits as amyloid fibrils within joints during long-term hemodialysis treatment. Despite the devastating effects of dialysis-related amyloidosis, full understanding of how fibrils form from soluble betam remains elusive. Here we show that betam can oligomerize and fibrillize via three-dimensional domain swapping. Isolating a covalently bound, domain-swapped dimer from betam oligomers on the pathway to fibrils, we were able to determine its crystal structure. The hinge loop that connects the swapped domain to the core domain includes the fibrillizing segment LSFSKD, whose atomic structure we also determined. The LSFSKD structure reveals a class 5 steric zipper, akin to other amyloid spines. The structures of the dimer and the zipper spine fit well into an atomic model for this fibrillar form of betam, which assembles slowly under physiological conditions.