

Author: Davis D.P. Gallo G. Vogen S.M. Dul J.L. Sciarretta K.L. Kumar A. Raffen R. Stevens F.J. Argon Y.
Publisher: Academic Press
ISSN: 0022-2836
Source: Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol.313, Iss.5, 2001-11, pp. : 1021-1034
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Abstract
Deposition of monoclonal immunoglobulin light chain (LC) aggregates in tissues is the hallmark of a class of fatal diseases with no effective treatment. In the most prevalent diseases two different types of LC aggregates are observed: fibrillar deposits in LC amyloidosis (AL) and granular aggregates in LC deposition disease (LCDD). The mechanisms by which a given LC forms either type of aggregate are not understood. Although some LCs are more aggregation-prone than others, this does not appear to be due to specific sequence determinants, but more likely from global properties that can be introduced by multiple somatic mutations. Moreover, a single LC isotype can sometimes form both fibrillar and granular aggregates within the same patient. To better understand how the different aggregation pathways arise, we developed a series of
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