Deletion of β-Strand and α-Helix Secondary Structure in Normal Prion Protein Inhibits Formation of Its Protease-Resistant Isoform

Abstract
A fundamental event in the pathogenesis of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) is the conversion of a normal, proteinase K-sensitive, host-encoded protein, PrP-sen, into its protease-resistant isoform, PrP-res. During the formation of PrP-res, PrP-sen undergoes conformational changes that involve an increase of β-sheet secondary structure. While previous studies in which PrP-sen deletion mutants were expressed in transgenic mice or scrapie-infected cell cultures have identified regions in PrP-sen that are important in the formation of PrP-res, the exact role of PrP-sen secondary structures in the conformational transition of PrP-sen to PrP-res has not yet been defined. We constructed PrP-sen mutants with deletions of the first β-strand, the second β-strand, or the first α-helix and tested whether these mutants could be converted to PrP-res in both scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells (Sc+-MNB cells) and a cell-free conversion assay. Removal of the second β-strand or the first α-helix significantly altered both processing and the cellular localization of PrP-sen, while deletion of the first β-strand had no effect on these events. However, all of the mutants significantly inhibited the formation of PrP-res in Sc+-MNB cells and had a greatly reduced ability to form protease-resistant PrP in a cell-free assay system. Thus, our results demonstrate that deletion of the β-strands and the first α-helix of PrP-sen can fundamentally affect PrP-res formation and/or PrP-sen processing.