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Letter
Nature Structural Biology  8, 316 - 320 (2001)
doi:10.1038/86188

Human cystatin C, an amyloidogenic protein, dimerizes through three-dimensional domain swapping

Robert Janowski1, Maciej Kozak1, 2, Elzbieta Jankowska3, Zbigniew Grzonka3, Anders Grubb4, Magnus Abrahamson4 & Mariusz Jaskolski1, 5

1  Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Chemistry, A. Mickiewicz University, Grunwaldzka 6, 60-780 Poznan, Poland.

2  Present address: Department of Macromolecular Physics, Faculty of Physics, A. Mickiewicz University, Umultowska 85, 61-614 Poznan, Poland.

3  Department of Organic Chemistry, University of Gdansk, Sobieskiego 18, 80-952 Gdansk, Poland.

4  Department of Clinical Chemistry, University of Lund, Sweden.

5  Center for Biocrystallographic Research, Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Noskowskiego 12/14, 61-704 Poznan, Poland.

Correspondence should be addressed to Mariusz Jaskolski mariuszj@amu.edu.pl
The crystal structure of human cystatin C, a protein with amyloidogenic properties and a potent inhibitor of cysteine proteases, reveals how the protein refolds to produce very tight two-fold symmetric dimers while retaining the secondary structure of the monomeric form. The dimerization occurs through three-dimensional domain swapping, a mechanism for forming oligomeric proteins. The reconstituted monomer-like domains are similar to chicken cystatin except for one inhibitory loop that unfolds to form the 'open interface' of the dimer. The structure explains the tendency of human cystatin C to dimerize and suggests a mechanism for its aggregation in the brain arteries of elderly people with amyloid angiopathy. A more severe 'conformational disease' is associated with the L68Q mutant of human cystatin C, which causes massive amyloidosis, cerebral hemorrhage and death in young adults. The structure of the three-dimensional domain-swapped dimers shows how the L68Q mutation destabilizes the monomers and makes the partially unfolded intermediate less unstable. Higher aggregates may arise through the three-dimensional domain-swapping mechanism occurring in an open-ended fashion in which partially unfolded molecules are linked into infinite chains.


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Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
ISSN: 1545-9993
EISSN: 1545-9985
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