Non-fibrillar prion protein oligomers transmit structural information during early assembly

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Abstract

The prion paradigm is founded on the transmission of structural information from aggregated assemblies to soluble protein substrates, a process classically attributed to fibril-end-mediated templating. Whether non-fibrillar assemblies or transient oligomeric states can also participate in folding information transfer remains unclear. Here, using recombinant prion protein (PrP), rational mutagenesis, hetero-oligomerization assays, arrested reaction conditions, and single-particle atomic force microscopy coupled to infrared nano-spectroscopy (AFM-IR), we examine the earliest stages of PrP assembly from the perspective of folding information transmission. We show that polymerization-defective PrP variants can be incorporated into oligomeric assemblies through structural complementation, in which folding information supplied by wild-type PrP restores their assembly competence. Under arrested reaction conditions, transient polymerization-competent conformers further contribute to folding information transfer at subcritical concentrations. Domain-resolved analyses reveal a modular oligomeric architecture in which a β-sheet-rich B domain constitutes the primary scaffold for folding information transfer. Preformed O1 oligomers then act as autonomous conformational templates that promote mutant incorporation and undergo hierarchical condensation through accretion of a structurally distinct E domain. Together, these findings demonstrate that non-fibrillar PrP oligomers and transient assembly intermediates can store and transmit folding information and may function as oligomer-based secondary nucleation platforms, expanding the conceptual framework of prion assembly beyond fibril-end elongation alone.

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