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Nucleation of Huntingtin Aggregation Proceeds via Conformational Conversion of Pre-Formed, Sparsely-Populated Tetramers.

Pathogenic huntingtin exon-1 protein (httex1 ), characterized by an expanded polyglutamine tract located between the N-terminal amphiphilic region and a C-terminal polyproline-rich domain, forms fibrils that accumulate in neuronal inclusion bodies, and is associated with a fatal, autosomal dominant neurodegenerative condition known as Huntington's disease. Here a complete kinetic model is described for aggregation/fibril formation of a httex1 construct with a 35-residue polyglutamine repeat, httex1 Q35 . Using exchange NMR spectroscopy, it is previously shown that the reversible formation of a sparsely-populated tetramer of the N-terminal amphiphilic domain of httex1 Q35 , comprising a D2 symmetric four-helix bundle, occurs on the microsecond time-scale and is a prerequisite for subsequent nucleation and fibril formation on a time scale that is many orders of magnitude slower (hours). Here a unified kinetic model of httex1 Q35 aggregation is developed in which fast, reversible tetramerization is directly linked to slow irreversible fibril formation via conversion of pre-equilibrated tetrameric species to "active", chain elongation-capable nuclei by conformational re-arrangement with a finite, monomer-independent rate. The unified model permits global quantitative analysis of reversible tetramerization and irreversible fibril formation from a time series of 1 H-15 N correlation spectra recorded during the course of httex1 Q35 aggregation.

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