International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2021)

Myosin Binding Protein-C Forms Amyloid-Like Aggregates In Vitro

  • Liya G. Bobyleva,
  • Sergey A. Shumeyko,
  • Elmira I. Yakupova,
  • Alexey K. Surin,
  • Oxana V. Galzitskaya,
  • Hiroshi Kihara,
  • Alexander A. Timchenko,
  • Maria A. Timchenko,
  • Nikita V. Penkov,
  • Alexey D. Nikulin,
  • Mariya Yu. Suvorina,
  • Nikolay V. Molochkov,
  • Mikhail Yu. Lobanov,
  • Roman S. Fadeev,
  • Ivan M. Vikhlyantsev,
  • Alexander G. Bobylev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22020731
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 2
p. 731

Abstract

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This work investigated in vitro aggregation and amyloid properties of skeletal myosin binding protein-C (sMyBP-C) interacting in vivo with proteins of thick and thin filaments in the sarcomeric A-disc. Dynamic light scattering (DLS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) found a rapid (5–10 min) formation of large (>2 μm) aggregates. sMyBP-C oligomers formed both at the initial 5–10 min and after 16 h of aggregation. Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and DLS revealed sMyBP-C oligomers to consist of 7–10 monomers. TEM and atomic force microscopy (AFM) showed sMyBP-C to form amorphous aggregates (and, to a lesser degree, fibrillar structures) exhibiting no toxicity on cell culture. X-ray diffraction of sMyBP-C aggregates registered reflections attributed to a cross-β quaternary structure. Circular dichroism (CD) showed the formation of the amyloid-like structure to occur without changes in the sMyBP-C secondary structure. The obtained results indicating a high in vitro aggregability of sMyBP-C are, apparently, a consequence of structural features of the domain organization of proteins of this family. Formation of pathological amyloid or amyloid-like sMyBP-C aggregates in vivo is little probable due to amino-acid sequence low identity (<26%), alternating ordered/disordered regions in the protein molecule, and S–S bonds providing for general stability.

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