Serious diseases have been shown to be related to unhealthy protein chains that occur when proteins fold 'incorrectly'.
In an article in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, PNAS, a research team from Uppsala
University have shown that similar protein chains in our environment may hasten the process.
Under certain conditions, incorrectly folded proteins can transmit diseases from one individual to another. This is the
mechanism in diseases caused by prions, such as mad cow disease or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. In principle prions are normal
proteins, but they have an abnormal three-dimensional structure. Prions bring about infections by prompting other normal
protein molecules to assume the abnormal form. These lumps then aggregate into a chain, which starts a chain reaction that
ultimately causes a fatal disease.
There are other human proteins that can also change their three-dimensional structure in a similar manner and give rise to
unhealthy protein chains, so-called amyloid. Amyloid contributes to the occurrence of many different diseases, such as
Alzheimer‚s disease and type-2 diabetes, but it is also a serious complication of long-term inflammatory conditions such as
rheumatoid arthritis.
This disease, which is called secondary or AA-amyloidosis, also occurs in mice and can be transmitted from one animal to
another via a prion-like mechanism. Here, too, the infected particle is not a micro-organism but rather an incorrectly folded
and chain-shaped protein, in this case AA-protein in the form of amyloid. It is still not known exactly how the incorrectly
folded protein gets other normally folded protein molecules to assume the abnormal form.
Amyloid is always morbid in humans and mice, but amyloid-like chains also occur normally in our environment. Certain bacteria
and fungi have amyloid-like chains on their surfaces. Silk and spider webs are other amyloid-like examples. The research team
has found that such chain-shaped proteins hasten the development of AA-amyloidosis and can 'transmit' the disease in animals
under certain conditions. In other words, it seems as if the chain-like protein forms in our environment can inter-react with
some of our own proteins and cause disease. Since amyloid is involved in many other diseases, the findings may indicate that
environmental factors of a previously unknown type can affect and hasten the occurrence of diseases in which amyloid plays a
central role.
The research was carried out by a team consisting of Dr. Katarzyna Lundmark, Karolinska Institute, Associate Professor Arne
Olsén, Göteborg University, Associate Professor Gunilla T Westermark, Linköping University, and Professor Per Westermark,
Uppsala University.
UPPSALA UNIVERSITET
uadm.uu.se
P.O. Box 256
SE-751 05 Uppsala
Uppsala
Sweden
SOURCE: alphagalileo