A structural basis for prion strain diversity

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Abstract

Recent cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) studies of infectious, ex vivo, prion fibrils from hamster 263K and mouse RML prion strains revealed a similar, parallel in-register intermolecular β-sheet (PIRIBS) amyloid architecture. Rungs of the fibrils are composed of individual prion protein (PrP) monomers that fold to create distinct N-terminal and C-terminal lobes. However, disparity in the hamster/mouse PrP sequence precludes understanding of how divergent prion strains emerge from an identical PrP substrate. In this study, we determined the near-atomic resolution cryo-EM structure of infectious, ex vivo mouse prion fibrils from the ME7 prion strain and compared this with the RML fibril structure. This structural comparison of two biologically distinct mouse-adapted prion strains suggests defined folding subdomains of PrP rungs and the way in which they are interrelated, providing a structural definition of intra-species prion strain-specific conformations. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

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Manka, S. W., Wenborn, A., Betts, J., Joiner, S., Saibil, H. R., Collinge, J., & Wadsworth, J. D. F. (2023). A structural basis for prion strain diversity. Nature Chemical Biology, 19(5), 607–613. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41589-022-01229-7

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