Thermal aggregation of bovine serum albumin (BSA) has been studied using dynamic light scattering, asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation and analytical ultracentrifugation. The studies were carried out at fixed temperatures (60°C, 65°C, 70°C and 80°C) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, at BSA concentration of 1 mg/ml. Thermal denaturation of the protein was studied by differential scanning calorimetry. Analysis of the experimental data shows that at 65°C the stage of protein unfolding and individual stages of protein aggregation are markedly separated in time. This circumstance allowed us to propose the following mechanism of thermal aggregation of BSA. Protein unfolding results in the formation of two forms of the non-native protein with different propensity to aggregation. One of the forms (highly reactive unfolded form, Uhr) is characterized by a high rate of aggregation. Aggregation of Uhr leads to the formation of primary aggregates with the hydrodynamic radius (Rh,1) of 10.3 nm. The second form (low reactive unfolded form, Ulr) participates in the aggregation process by its attachment to the primary aggregates produced by the Uhr form and possesses ability for self-aggregation with formation of stable small-sized aggregates (Ast). At complete exhaustion of Ulr, secondary aggregates with the hydrodynamic radius (Rh,2) of 12.8 nm are formed. At 60°C the rates of unfolding and aggregation are commensurate, at 70°C the rates of formation of the primary and secondary aggregates are commensurate, at 80°C the registration of the initial stages of aggregation is complicated by formation of large-sized aggregates.
Thermal denaturation and aggregation of beta(L)-crystallin from bovine lens have been studied using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic light scattering (DLS). According to the DLS data, the distribution of the beta(L)-crystallin aggregates by their hydrodynamic radius (R(h)) remains monomodal to the point of precipitating aggregates (sodium phosphate, pH 6.8; 100 mM NaCl; 60 degrees C). The size of the start aggregates (R(h,0)) and duration of the latent stage (t(0)) leading to the formation of the start aggregates have been determined from the light scattering intensity versus the hydrodynamic radius plots and the dependences of R(h) on time. The R(h,0) value remains constant at variation of the beta(L)-crystallin concentration, whereas the t(0) value increases with diminishing beta(L)-crystallin concentration. The suppression of beta(L)-crystallin aggregation by alpha-crystallin is connected with the decrease in the R(h,0) value and increase in the t(0) value. In the presence of alpha-crystallin the aggregate population is split into two components. The first component is represented by stable aggregates whose size remains constant in time. The aggregates of the other kind grow until they reach the size characteristic of aggregates prone to precipitation. The DSC data show that alpha-crystallin has no appreciable influence on thermal denaturation of beta(L)-crystallin.
In this review the mechanisms of protein folding, misfolding, and aggregation as well as the mechanisms of cell defense against toxic protein aggregates are considered. Misfolded and aggregated proteins in cells are exposed to chaperone-mediated refolding and are degraded by proteasomes if refolding is impossible. Proteolysis-stable protein aggregates accumulate, forming inclusion bodies. In eucaryotic cells, protein aggregates form structures in the pericentrosomal area that have been termed "aggresomes". Formation of aggresomes in cells is a general cellular response to the presence of misfolded proteins when the degrading capacity of the cells is exceeded. The role of aggresomes in disturbance of the proteasomal system operation and in cellular death, particularly in the so-called "protein conformational diseases", is discussed.
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