Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Laszlo L. P. Hosszu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Laszlo L. P. Hosszu.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Location and properties of metal-binding sites on the human prion protein

Graham S. Jackson; Ian R. Murray; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Nicholas Gibbs; Jonathan P. Waltho; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge

Although a functional role in copper binding has been suggested for the prion protein, evidence for binding at affinities characteristic of authentic metal-binding proteins has been lacking. By presentation of copper(II) ions in the presence of the weak chelator glycine, we have now characterized two high-affinity binding sites for divalent transition metals within the human prion protein. One is in the N-terminal octapeptide-repeat segment and has a Kd for copper(II) of 10−14 M, with other metals (Ni2+, Zn2+, and Mn2+) binding three or more orders of magnitude more weakly. However, NMR and fluorescence data reveal a previously unreported second site around histidines 96 and 111, a region of the molecule known to be crucial for prion propagation. The Kd for copper(II) at this site is 4 × 10−14 M, whereas nickel(II), zinc(II), and manganese(II) bind 6, 7, and 10 orders of magnitude more weakly, respectively, regardless of whether the protein is in its oxidized α-helical (α-PrP) or reduced β-sheet (β-PrP) conformation. A role for prion protein (PrP) in copper metabolism or transport seems likely and disturbance of this function may be involved in prion-related neurotoxicity.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Multiple folding pathways for heterologously expressed human prion protein

Graham Stuart Jackson; Andrew F. Hill; Catherine Joseph; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Aisling Power; Jonathan P. Waltho; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge

Human PrP (residues 91-231) expressed in Escherichia coli can adopt several conformations in solution depending on pH, redox conditions and denaturant concentration. Oxidised PrP at neutral pH, with the disulphide bond intact, is a soluble monomer which contains 47% alpha-helix and corresponds to PrPC. Denaturation studies show that this structure has a relatively small, solvent-excluded core and unfolds to an unstructured state in a single, co-operative transition with a DeltaG for folding of -5.6 kcal mol-1. The unfolding behaviour is sensitive to pH and at 4.0 or below the molecule unfolds via a stable folding intermediate. This equilibrium intermediate has a reduced helical content and aggregates over several hours. When the disulphide bond is reduced the protein adopts different conformations depending upon pH. At neutral pH or above, the reduced protein has an alpha-helical fold, which is identical to that observed for the oxidised protein. At pH 4 or below, the conformation rearranges to a fold that contains a high proportion of beta-sheet structure. In the reduced state the alpha- and beta-forms are slowly inter-convertible whereas when oxidised the protein can only adopt an alpha-conformation in free solution. The data we present here shows that the human prion protein can exist in multiple conformations some of which are known to be capable of forming fibrils. The precise conformation that human PrP adopts and the pathways for unfolding are dependent upon solvent conditions. The conditions we examined are within the range that a protein may encounter in sub-cellular compartments and may have implications for the mechanism of conversion of PrPC to PrPSc in vivo. Since the conversion of PrPC to PrPSc is accompanied by a switch in secondary structure from alpha to beta, this system provides a useful model for studying major structural rearrangements in the prion protein.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

A reassessment of copper(II) binding in the full-length prion protein

Mark A. Wells; Graham S. Jackson; Samantha Jones; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; C. Jeremy Craven; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge; Jonathan P. Waltho

It has been shown previously that the unfolded N-terminal domain of the prion protein can bind up to six Cu2+ ions in vitro. This domain contains four tandem repeats of the octapeptide sequence PHGGGWGQ, which, alongside the two histidine residues at positions 96 and 111, contribute to its Cu2+ binding properties. At the maximum metal-ion occupancy each Cu2+ is co-ordinated by a single imidazole and deprotonated backbone amide groups. However two recent studies of peptides representing the octapeptide repeat region of the protein have shown, that at low Cu2+ availability, an alternative mode of co-ordination occurs where the metal ion is bound by multiple histidine imidazole groups. Both modes of binding are readily populated at pH 7.4, while mild acidification to pH 5.5 selects in favour of the low occupancy, multiple imidazole binding mode. We have used NMR to resolve how Cu2+ binds to the full-length prion protein under mildly acidic conditions where multiple histidine co-ordination is dominant. We show that at pH 5.5 the protein binds two Cu2+ ions, and that all six histidine residues of the unfolded N-terminal domain and the N-terminal amine act as ligands. These two sites are of sufficient affinity to be maintained in the presence of millimolar concentrations of competing exogenous histidine. A previously unknown interaction between the N-terminal domain and a site on the C-terminal domain becomes apparent when the protein is loaded with Cu2+. Furthermore, the data reveal that sub-stoichiometric quantities of Cu2+ will cause self-association of the prion protein in vitro, suggesting that Cu2+ may play a role in controlling oligomerization in vivo.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

Multiple forms of copper(II) co-ordination occur throughout the disordered N-terminal region of the prion protein at pH 7.4

Mark A. Wells; Clare Jelinska; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; C. Jeremy Craven; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge; Jonathan P. Waltho; Graham S. Jackson

Although the physiological function of the prion protein remains unknown, in vitro experiments suggest that the protein may bind copper (II) ions and play a role in copper transport or homoeostasis in vivo. The unstructured N-terminal region of the prion protein has been shown to bind up to six copper (II) ions, with each of these ions co-ordinated by a single histidine imidazole and nearby backbone amide nitrogen atoms. Individually, these sites have micromolar affinities, which is weaker than would be expected of a true cuproprotein. In the present study, we show that with subsaturating levels of copper, different forms of co-ordination will occur, which have higher affinity. We have investigated the copper-binding properties of two peptides representing the known copper-binding regions of the prion protein: residues 57-91, which contains four tandem repeats of the octapeptide GGGWGQPH, and residues 91-115. Using equilibrium dialysis and spectroscopic methods, we unambiguously demonstrate that the mode of copper co-ordination in both of these peptides depends on the number of copper ions bound and that, at low copper occupancy, copper ions are co-ordinated with sub-micromolar affinity by multiple histidine imidazole groups. At pH 7.4, three different modes of copper co-ordination are accessible within the octapeptide repeats and two within the peptide comprising residues 91-115. The highest affinity copper (II)-binding modes cause self-association of both peptides, suggesting a role for copper (II) in controlling prion protein self-association in vivo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Residue 129 Polymorphism in Human Prion Protein Does Not Confer Susceptibility to Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease by Altering the Structure or Global Stability of PrPC

Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Graham S. Jackson; Clare R. Trevitt; Samantha Jones; Mark Batchelor; Daljit Bhelt; Kanella Prodromidou; Anthony R. Clarke; Jonathan P. Waltho; John Collinge

There are two common forms of prion protein (PrP) in humans, with either methionine or valine at position 129. This polymorphism is a powerful determinant of the genetic susceptibility of humans toward both sporadic and acquired forms of prion disease and restricts propagation of particular prion strains. Despite its key role, we have no information on the effect of this mutation on the structure, stability, folding, and dynamics of the cellular form of PrP (PrPC). Here, we show that the mutation has no measurable effect on the folding, dynamics, and stability of PrPC. Our data indicate that the 129M/V polymorphism does not affect prion propagation through its effect on PrPC; rather, its influence is likely to be downstream in the disease mechanism. We infer that the M/V effect is mediated through the conformation or stability of disease-related PrP (PrPSc) or intermediates or on the kinetics of their formation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Folding kinetics of the human prion protein probed by temperature jump

Tanya Hart; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Clare R. Trevitt; Graham S. Jackson; Jonathan P. Waltho; John Collinge; Anthony R. Clarke

Temperature-jump perturbation was used to examine the relaxation kinetics of folding of the human prion protein. Measured rates were very fast (≈3,000 s−1), with the extrapolated folding rate constant at ≈20 °C in physiological conditions reaching 20,000 s−1. By a mutational analysis of core residues, we found that only 2, on the interface of helices 2 and 3, have significant ϕ-values in the transition state. Interestingly, a mutation sandwiched between the above 2 residues on the helix–helix contact interface had very little effect on the overall free energy of folding but led to the formation of a monomeric misfolded state, which had to unfold to acquire the native PrPC conformation. Another mutation that led to a marked destabilization of the native fold also formed a misfolded intermediate, but this was aggregation-prone despite the native state of this mutant being soluble. Taken together, the data imply that this fast-folding protein has a transition state that is not compact (m value analysis gives a βt value of only 0.3) but contains a developing nucleus between helices 2 and 3. The fact that a mutation in this nucleus had a negligible effect on stability but still led to formation of aberrant conformations during folding implies an easily perturbed folding mechanism. It is notable that in inherited forms of human prion disease, where point mutations produce a lethal dominant condition, 20 of the 33 amino acid replacements occur in the helix-2/3 sequence.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Effects of domain dissection on the folding and stability of the 43 kDa protein PGK probed by NMR

Michelle A.C. Reed; Andrea M. Hounslow; Kong-Hung Sze; Igor G. Barsukov; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Anthony R. Clarke; C. Jeremy Craven; Jonathan P. Waltho

The characterization of early folding intermediates is key to understanding the protein folding process. Previous studies of the N-domain of phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) from Bacillus stearothermophilus combined equilibrium amide exchange data with a kinetic model derived from stopped-flow kinetics. Together, these implied the rapid formation of an intermediate with extensive native-like hydrogen bonding. However, there was an absence of protection in the region proximal to the C-domain in the intact protein. We now report data for the intact PGK molecule, which at 394 residues constitutes a major extension to the protein size for which such data can be acquired. The methods utilised to achieve the backbone assignment are described in detail, including a semi-automated protocol based on a simulated annealing Monte Carlo technique. A substantial increase in the stability of the contact region is observed, allowing protection to be inferred on both faces of the beta-sheet in the intermediate. Thus, the entire N-domain acts concertedly in the formation of the kinetic refolding intermediate rather than there existing a distinct local folding nucleus.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Conformational Properties of β-PrP

Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Clare R. Trevitt; Samanthan Jones; Mark Batchelor; David J. Scott; Graham S. Jackson; John Collinge; Jonathan P. Waltho; Anthony R. Clarke

Prion propagation involves a conformational transition of the cellular form of prion protein (PrPC) to a disease-specific isomer (PrPSc), shifting from a predominantly α-helical conformation to one dominated by β-sheet structure. This conformational transition is of critical importance in understanding the molecular basis for prion disease. Here, we elucidate the conformational properties of a disulfide-reduced fragment of human PrP spanning residues 91–231 under acidic conditions, using a combination of heteronuclear NMR, analytical ultracentrifugation, and circular dichroism. We find that this form of the protein, which similarly to PrPSc, is a potent inhibitor of the 26 S proteasome, assembles into soluble oligomers that have significant β-sheet content. The monomeric precursor to these oligomers exhibits many of the characteristics of a molten globule intermediate with some helical character in regions that form helices I and III in the PrPC conformation, whereas helix II exhibits little evidence for adopting a helical conformation, suggesting that this region is a likely source of interaction within the initial phases of the transformation to a β-rich conformation. This precursor state is almost as compact as the folded PrPC structure and, as it assembles, only residues 126–227 are immobilized within the oligomeric structure, leaving the remainder in a mobile, random-coil state.


Open Biology | 2016

Ex vivo mammalian prions are formed of paired double helical prion protein fibrils

Cassandra Terry; Adam Wenborn; Nathalie Gros; J. Sells; Susan Joiner; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Tattum Mh; Silvia Panico; Daniel K. Clare; John Collinge; Helen R. Saibil; Jdf Wadsworth

Mammalian prions are hypothesized to be fibrillar or amyloid forms of prion protein (PrP), but structures observed to date have not been definitively correlated with infectivity and the three-dimensional structure of infectious prions has remained obscure. Recently, we developed novel methods to obtain exceptionally pure preparations of prions from mouse brain and showed that pathogenic PrP in these high-titre preparations is assembled into rod-like assemblies. Here, we have used precise cell culture-based prion infectivity assays to define the physical relationship between the PrP rods and prion infectivity and have used electron tomography to define their architecture. We show that infectious PrP rods isolated from multiple prion strains have a common hierarchical assembly comprising twisted pairs of short fibres with repeating substructure. The architecture of the PrP rods provides a new structural basis for understanding prion infectivity and can explain the inability to systematically generate high-titre synthetic prions from recombinant PrP.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

N-terminal domain of prion protein directs its oligomeric association*

Clare R. Trevitt; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Mark Batchelor; Silvia Panico; Cassandra Terry; Andrew J. Nicoll; Emmanuel Risse; William A. Taylor; Malin K. Sandberg; Huda Al-Doujaily; Jacqueline M. Linehan; Helen R. Saibil; David J. Scott; John Collinge; Jonathan P. Waltho; Anthony R. Clarke

Background: Non-fibrillar oligomers are implicated as neurotoxic species in several amyloid neurodegenerative diseases. Results: Full-length prion protein (PrP) forms distinct non-fibrillar β-sheet-rich oligomers. Truncated protein, lacking the N terminus forms nonspecific aggregates. Conclusion: The unstructured N terminus of PrP is key to the folding and aggregation of its structured region. Significance: To examine the full repertoire of PrP conformers and assembly states, full-length protein should be used. The self-association of prion protein (PrP) is a critical step in the pathology of prion diseases. It is increasingly recognized that small non-fibrillar β-sheet-rich oligomers of PrP may be of crucial importance in the prion disease process. Here, we characterize the structure of a well defined β-sheet-rich oligomer, containing ∼12 PrP molecules, and often enclosing a central cavity, formed using full-length recombinant PrP. The N-terminal region of prion protein (residues 23–90) is required for the formation of this distinct oligomer; a truncated form comprising residues 91–231 forms a broad distribution of aggregated species. No infectivity or toxicity was found using cell and animal model systems. This study demonstrates that examination of the full repertoire of conformers and assembly states that can be accessed by PrP under specific experimental conditions should ideally be done using the full-length protein.

Collaboration


Dive into the Laszlo L. P. Hosszu's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Collinge

UCL Institute of Neurology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Batchelor

University College London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Samantha Jones

University College London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David J. Scott

University of Nottingham

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge