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Letter
Nature 437, 262-265 (8 September 2005) | doi:10.1038/nature03981; Received 4 March 2005; Accepted 24 June 2005
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Prion protein remodelling confers an immediate phenotypic switch
Prasanna Satpute-Krishnan1 & Tricia R. Serio1
- Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA
Correspondence to: Tricia R. Serio1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to T.R.S. (Email: Tricia_Serio@Brown.edu).
Abstract
In a variety of systems, proteins have been linked to processes historically limited to nucleic acids, such as infectivity and inheritance1, 2. These atypical proteins, termed prions3, lack sequence homology but are collectively defined by their capacity to adopt multiple physical and therefore functional states in vivo. Newly synthesized prion protein generally adopts the form already present in the cell, and this in vivo folding bias directs the near faithful transmission of the corresponding phenotypic state1, 2. Switches between the prion and non-prion phenotypes can occur in vivo2; however, the fate of existing protein during these transitions and its effects on the emergence of new traits remain major unanswered questions. Here, we determine the changes in protein-state that induce phenotypic switching for the yeast prion Sup35/[PSI+]. We show that the prion form does not need to be specified by an alternate misfolding pathway initiated during Sup35 synthesis but instead can be accessed by mature protein. This remodelling of protein from one stable form to another is accompanied by the loss of Sup35 activity, evoking a rapid change in cellular phenotype within a single cell cycle.
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RESEARCH
J-protein co-chaperone Sis1 required for generation of [RNQ + ] seeds necessary for prion propagationThe EMBO Journal Article (22 Aug 2007)
Oligopeptide repeats in the yeast protein Sup35p stabilize intermolecular prion interactionsThe EMBO Journal Article (01 May 2001)
Strains of [PSI + ] are distinguished by their efficiencies of prion-mediated conformational conversionThe EMBO Journal Article (15 Nov 2001)
Mechanism of inhibition of Ψ + prion determinant propagation by a mutation of the N-terminus of the yeast Sup35 proteinThe EMBO Journal Article (01 Oct 1998)
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