Abstract.
Protein amyloid is often deposited in connection with neurodegenerative diseases. Such deposits generally possess three principal drawbacks: cytotoxicity, lack of spatial control in their deposition and structural polymorphism. These are typical features of biologically non-optimized systems which have not been exposed to evolutionary pressure. Nevertheless, Nature uses the cross-β self-organizing principle in many structural contexts where a strong but pliable material is needed. Functional amyloid is found in humans, invertebrates, fungi and, not least, bacteria, in which amyloid may be the rule rather than the exception. Detailed case studies reveal how directed nucleation can use tailor-made proteins optimized to assume a specific amyloid conformation, leading to remarkably robust assemblies. This makes it highly challenging to purify and analyze the products formed in vivo. We contrast pathogenic and in-vitro-formed amyloid with functional amyloid, paying particular reference to bacterial amyloid, and discuss challenges and perspectives in identifying and characterizing this class of protein.
We seek them here, we seek them there,
We scientists seek them everywhere:
Are they our heaven, are they our hell?
Those damned elusive strands in that fibril!
Adapted from The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness d’Orczy
Keywords. Protein, bacteria, aggregate, CsgA, functional amyloid, cytotoxicity, polymorphism
Footnotes
Received 4 September 2007; received after revision 22 October 2007; accepted 29 October 2007