Effects of pulsed electric fields on yeast with prions and the structure of amyloid fibrils

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Abstract

Prions are misfolded, self-replicating, and transmissible proteins capable of causing different conditions that affect the brain and nervous system in humans and animals. Yeasts are the perfect model to study prion formation, dissemination, and the structure of protein aggregates. Yeast prions are related to stress resistance, cell fitness, and viability. Applying a pulsed electric field (PEF) as a factor capable of disintegrating the amyloid aggregates arises from the fact that the amyloid aggregates form via noncovalent bonds and stabilize via electrostatic interactions. In this research, we applied 2–26 kV/cm PEF delivered in sequences of 5 pulses of 1 ms duration to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell without prions and containing strong and weak variants of the [PSI+] prion (prion form of Sup35 translation termination factor). We determined that prions significantly increase cell survivability and resistance to PEF treatment. The application of PEF to the purified Sup35NM fibrils showed that the electric field causes significant reductions in the length of fibrils and the full disintegration of fibrils to Sup35 oligomers can be achieved in higher fields.

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Jurgelevičiūtė, J., Bičkovas, N., Sakalauskas, A., Novickij, V., Smirnovas, V., & Lastauskienė, E. (2021). Effects of pulsed electric fields on yeast with prions and the structure of amyloid fibrils. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 11(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/app11062684

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