Abstract
The downstream prion-like protein (doppel, or Dpl) is a paralog of the cellular prion protein, PrPC. The two proteins have ≈25% sequence identity, but seem to have distinct physiologic roles. Unlike PrPC, Dpl does not support prion replication; instead, over-expression of Dpl in the brain seems to cause a completely different neurodegenerative disease. We report the solution structure of a fragment of recombinant mouse Dpl (residues 26-157) containing a globular domain with three helices and a small amount of β-structure. Overall, the topology of Dpl is very similar to that of PrPC. Significant differences include a marked kink in one of the helices in Dpl, and a different orientation of the two short β-strands. Although the two proteins most likely arose through duplication of a single ancestral gene, the relationship is now so distant that only the structures retain similarity; the functions have diversified along with the sequence.
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Mo, H., Moore, R. C., Cohen, F. E., Westaway, D., Prusiner, S. B., Wright, P. E., & Dyson, H. J. (2001). Two different neurodegenerative diseases caused by proteins with similar structures. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 98(5), 2352–2357. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.051627998
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