[No authors listed]
Variation in amyloid structures profoundly influences a wide array of pathological phenotypes in mammalian protein conformation disorders and dominantly inherited phenotypes in yeast. Here, we describe, for the first time, naturally occurring, self-propagating, structural variants of a prion protein isolated from wild strains of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Variants of the [RNQâº] prion propagating in a variety of wild yeast differ biochemically, in their intracellular distributions, and in their ability to promote formation of the [PSIâº] prion. [PSIâº] is an epigenetic regulator of cellular phenotype and adaptability. Strikingly, we find that most natural [RNQâº] variants induced [PSIâº] at high frequencies and the majority of [PSIâº] variants elicited strong cellular phenotypes. We hypothesize that the presence of an efficient [RNQâº] template primes the cell for [PSIâº] formation in order to induce [PSIâº] in conditions where it would be advantageous. These studies utilize naturally occurring structural variants to expand our understanding of the consequences of diverse prion conformations on cellular phenotypes.
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