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Published online before print August 31, 2007, 10.1110/ps.072955307
Protein Science (2007), 16:2195-2204. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2007 The Protein Society
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Interactions between homopolymeric amino acids (HPAAs)

Yoko Oma, Yoshihiro Kino, Kazuya Toriumi, Noboru Sasagawa, and Shoichi Ishiura

Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8902, Japan

(RECEIVED April 18, 2007; FINAL REVISION July 2, 2007; ACCEPTED July 3, 2007)

Many human proteins contain consecutive amino acid repeats, known as homopolymeric amino acid (HPAA) tracts. Some inherited diseases are caused by proteins in which HPAAs are expanded to an excessive length. To this day, nine polyglutamine-related diseases and nine polyalanine-related diseases have been reported, including Huntington's disease and oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy. In this study, potential HPAA–HPAA interactions were examined by yeast two-hybrid assays using HPAAs of ~30 residues in length. The results indicate that hydrophobic HPAAs interact with themselves and with other hydrophobic HPAAs. Previously, we reported that hydrophobic HPAAs formed large aggregates in COS-7 cells. Here, those HPAAs were shown to have significant interactions with each other, suggesting that hydrophobicity plays an important role in aggregation. Among the observed HPAA–HPAA interactions, the Ala28–Ala29 interaction was notable because polyalanine tracts of these lengths have been established to be pathogenic in several polyalanine-related diseases. By testing several constructs of different lengths, we clarified that polyalanine self-interacts at longer lengths (>23 residues) but not at shorter lengths (six to ~23 residues) in a yeast two-hybrid assay and a GST pulldown assay. This self-interaction was found to be SDS sensitive in SDS-PAGE and native-PAGE assays. Moreover, the intracellular localization of these long polyalanine tracts was also observed to be disturbed. Our results suggest that long tracts of polyalanine acquire SDS-sensitive self-association properties, which may be a prerequisite event for their abnormal folding. The misfolding of these tracts is thought to be a common molecular aspect underlying the pathogenesis of polyalanine-related diseases.

Keywords: polyalanine; polyglutamine; triplet repeat; aggregate



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