* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Received July 17, 2007; Revision received October 12, 2007
The sequence-reversed form of a small heat shock protein, HSP12.6 (retro-HSP12.6), has been reported to fold and assemble into structured tetramers in aqueous solution. Upon raising the protein concentration to ~1.0-1.5 mg/ml, tetrameric retro-HSP12.6 is known to display a tendency to associate further into spherical beads of 18-20 nm in diameter containing folded protein subunits. Here we report that storage of this protein at low temperatures leads to further association of the beaded structures into linear and ring-shaped amyloid nanofibers of 18-20 nm in diameter. The electron micrographs presented in this communication provide the best visual evidence yet that amyloids can form through the association of smaller structured bead-like intermediates. The results also suggest that folded beta-sheet-rich subunits can participate in amyloid formation.
KEY WORDS: protein aggregation, amyloid-like aggregates, linear and ring-shaped amyloids, bead-amyloid transformation, amyloid filament assembly, folded protein aggregationDOI: 10.1134/S0006297908060084