2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021953
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

[PSI+] Maintenance Is Dependent on the Composition, Not Primary Sequence, of the Oligopeptide Repeat Domain

Abstract: [PSI+], the prion form of the yeast Sup35 protein, results from the structural conversion of Sup35 from a soluble form into an infectious amyloid form. The infectivity of prions is thought to result from chaperone-dependent fiber cleavage that breaks large prion fibers into smaller, inheritable propagons. Like the mammalian prion protein PrP, Sup35 contains an oligopeptide repeat domain. Deletion analysis indicates that the oligopeptide repeat domain is critical for [PSI+] propagation, while a distinct region … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
34
0

Year Published

2011
2011
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
7
2

Relationship

2
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 34 publications
(36 citation statements)
references
References 55 publications
2
34
0
Order By: Relevance
“…It was proposed that the Sup35 (as well as New1) PrD can be divided into "aggregation" (QN stretch) and "propagation" (ORs) elements (Chernoff 2004a;Osherovich et al 2004) and that the propagation element is involved in interaction with Hsp104 (see Requirements for Prion Propagation: Shearing and Segregation). OR expansion increases de novo [PSI + ] generation (Liu and Lindquist 1999) although Ure2 or "scrambled" Sup35 PrDs lack ORs, indicating that ORs are not necessary for interaction with the chaperones responsible for prion propagation (Ross et al 2005b;Toombs et al 2011). Perhaps ORs are frequently associated with prions because the duplication events that generate them also extend the size of the regions with the amino acid compositions conducive to prion formation.…”
Section: Prion Domainsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was proposed that the Sup35 (as well as New1) PrD can be divided into "aggregation" (QN stretch) and "propagation" (ORs) elements (Chernoff 2004a;Osherovich et al 2004) and that the propagation element is involved in interaction with Hsp104 (see Requirements for Prion Propagation: Shearing and Segregation). OR expansion increases de novo [PSI + ] generation (Liu and Lindquist 1999) although Ure2 or "scrambled" Sup35 PrDs lack ORs, indicating that ORs are not necessary for interaction with the chaperones responsible for prion propagation (Ross et al 2005b;Toombs et al 2011). Perhaps ORs are frequently associated with prions because the duplication events that generate them also extend the size of the regions with the amino acid compositions conducive to prion formation.…”
Section: Prion Domainsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We previously proposed a second mechanism for how yeast PFDs could rapidly evolve (23). Oligopeptide repeat segments are found in multiple prion proteins, including PrP, Sup35, and Rnq1, and expansion of the PrP (24) or Sup35 (25) repeats increases prion activity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If prion activity is insensitive to the primary sequence of the repeats, then why are repeats so common in PFDs? We proposed that oligopeptide repeats may be common in PFDs simply because they provide a simple genetic mechanism for generating PFDs (23). Tandem repeats, both of single codons and larger oligopeptide segments, are common in eukaryotic genomes and can readily form due to errors in replication, repair, or recombination (27,28).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the GQ-rich region does not create a transmission barrier when deleted, it does contribute to prion formation through interactions with glutamine-asparagine-rich regions (Kadnar et al 2010). The repeat region of Sup35p is important for prion formation (Liu and Lindquist 1999;Parham et al 2001;Osherovich et al 2004), not because of the repeat feature, but because of the amino acid composition (Ross et al 2004;Ross et al 2005;Toombs et al 2011). The importance of repeats-as repeats-has not been tested for Rnq1p.…”
Section: Risk Factors For [Pin+] Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%