Intracellular aggregation of the human amyloid protein α-synuclein is causally linked to Parkinson's disease. While the isolated protein is intrinsically disordered, its native structure in mammalian cells is not known. Here we use nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to derive atomic-resolution insights into the structure and dynamics of α-synuclein in different mammalian cell types. We show that the disordered nature of monomeric α-synuclein is stably preserved in non-neuronal and neuronal cells. Under physiological cell conditions, α-synuclein is amino-terminally acetylated and adopts conformations that are more compact than when in buffer, with residues of the aggregation-prone non-amyloid-β component (NAC) region shielded from exposure to the cytoplasm, which presumably counteracts spontaneous aggregation. These results establish that different types of crowded intracellular environments do not inherently promote α-synuclein oligomerization and, more generally, that intrinsic structural disorder is sustainable in mammalian cells.
Protein structure investigations are usually carried out in vitro under conditions far from their native environment in the cell. Differences between in-cell and in vitro structures of proteins can be generated by crowding effects, local pH changes, specific and nonspecific protein and ligand binding events, and chemical modifications. Double electron-electron resonance (DEER), in conjunction with site-directed spin-labeling, has emerged in the past decade as a powerful technique for exploring protein conformations in frozen solutions. The major challenges facing the application of this methodology to in-cell measurements are the instabilities of the standard nitroxide spin labels in the cell environment and the limited sensitivity at conventional X-band frequencies. We present a new approach for in-cell DEER distance measurement in human cells, based on the use of: (i) reduction resistant Gd(3+) chelates as spin labels, (ii) high frequency (94.9 GHz) for sensitivity enhancement, and (iii) hypo-osmotic shock for efficient delivery of the labeled protein into the cell. The proof of concept is demonstrated on doubly labeled ubiquitin in HeLa cells.
Distance distribution
information obtained by pulsed dipolar EPR
spectroscopy provides an important contribution to many studies in
structural biology. Increasingly, such information is used in integrative
structural modeling, where it delivers unique restraints on the width
of conformational ensembles. In order to ensure reliability of the
structural models and of biological conclusions, we herein define
quality standards for sample preparation and characterization, for
measurements of distributed dipole–dipole couplings between
paramagnetic labels, for conversion of the primary time-domain data
into distance distributions, for interpreting these distributions,
and for reporting results. These guidelines are substantiated by a
multi-laboratory benchmark study and by analysis of data sets with
known distance distribution ground truth. The study and the guidelines
focus on proteins labeled with nitroxides and on double electron–electron
resonance (DEER aka PELDOR) measurements and provide suggestions on
how to proceed analogously in other cases.
Pulse electron−electron double resonance distance measurements between two high spin Gd3+ ions in a novel bis-Gd3+ complex involving two pyridine-based gadolinium tetracarboxylate systems linked by a rigid aryl−alkyne unit were carried out at Ka- and W-band frequencies. The experimental distance found was 2.02 ± 0.02 nm, and it was further compared with the Gd3+−Gd3+ distance (2.2126 nm) determined by density functional theory.
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