4.6 Article

Protease-sensitive regions in amyloid light chains: what a common pattern of fragmentation across organs suggests about aggregation

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 289, Issue 2, Pages 494-506

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.16182

Keywords

amyloid fibrils; amyloidogenesis; immunoglobulin light chains; proteolysis; proteomics

Funding

  1. Fondazione Cariplo [2018-0257, 2016-0489, 2015-0591]
  2. Italian Ministry of Health [GR-2018-12368387, RF-2016-02361756, IZS PLV 10/19 RC]
  3. Italian Medicines Agency [AIFA-2016-02364602]
  4. European Joint Programme on Rare Diseases E-RARE JTC
  5. Fondazione ARISLA project [TDP-43-STRUCT]
  6. Fondazione Telethon [GGP17036]
  7. Cancer Research UK
  8. FCAECC
  9. AIRC

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AL amyloidosis is characterized by the deposition of immunoglobulin light chains in target organs, with LC fragments consistently present in deposits. The fragmentation sites of LCs were found to be consistent across multiple organs but with some organ-specific positions, possibly due to a complex of proteases. Cleavage sites are concentrated in 'proteolysis-prone' regions, common to all tissues. Several proteolytic sites are not accessible on native dimers, while they are compatible with fibrils. This suggests that the heterogeneous ensemble of LC fragments originates in tissues and is consistent with digestion of preformed fibrils.
Light-chain (AL) amyloidosis is characterized by deposition of immunoglobulin light chains (LC) as fibrils in target organs. Alongside the full-length protein, abundant LC fragments are always present in AL deposits. Herein, by combining gel-based and mass spectrometry analyses, we identified and compared the fragmentation sites of amyloid LCs from multiple organs of an AL lambda amyloidosis patient (AL-55). The positions pinpointed here in kidney and subcutaneous fat, alongside those previously detected in heart of the same patient, were aligned and mapped on the LC's dimeric and fibrillar states. All tissues contain fragmented LCs along with the full-length protein; the fragment pattern is coincident across organs, although microheterogeneity exists. Multiple cleavage positions were detected; some are shared, whereas some are organ-specific, likely due to a complex of proteases. Cleavage sites are concentrated in 'proteolysis-prone' regions, common to all tissues. Several proteolytic sites are not accessible on native dimers, while they are compatible with fibrils. Overall, data suggest that the heterogeneous ensemble of LC fragments originates in tissues and is consistent with digestion of preformed fibrils, or with the hypothesis that initial proteolytic cleavage of the constant domain triggers the amyloidogenic potential of LCs, followed by subsequent proteolytic degradation. This work provides a unique set of molecular data on proteolysis from ex vivo amyloid, which allows discussing hypotheses on role and timing of proteolytic events occurring along amyloid formation and accumulation in AL patients.

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