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Intramolecular Charge Interactions as a Tool to Control the Coiled‐Coil‐to‐Amyloid Transformation
Authors:Kevin Pagel Dr  Sara C Wagner  Raheleh Rezaei Araghi  Hans von Berlepsch Dr  Christoph Böttcher Priv‐Doz Dr  Beate Koksch Prof Dr
Institution:1. Institute of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Freie Universit?t Berlin, Takustrasse 3, 14195 Berlin (Germany), Fax: (+49)?30‐838‐55‐644;2. Research Centre for Electron Microscopy, Freie Universit?t Berlin, Fabeckstrasse 36a, 14195 Berlin (Germany)
Abstract:Under the influence of a changed environment, amyloid‐forming proteins partially unfold and assemble into insoluble β‐sheet rich fibrils. Molecular‐level characterization of these assembly processes has been proven to be very challenging, and for this reason several simplified model systems have been developed over recent years. Herein, we present a series of three de novo designed model peptides that adopt different conformations and aggregate morphologies depending on concentration, pH value, and ionic strength. The design strictly follows the characteristic heptad repeat of the α‐helical coiled‐coil structural motif. In all peptides, three valine residues, known to prefer the β‐sheet conformation, have been incorporated at the solvent‐exposed b, c, and f positions to make the system prone to amyloid formation. Additionally, pH‐controllable intramolecular electrostatic repulsions between equally charged lysine (peptide A) or glutamate (peptide B) residues were introduced along one side of the helical cylinder. The conformational behavior was monitored by circular dichroism spectroscopic analysis and thioflavin T fluorescence, and the resulting aggregates were further characterized by transmission electron microscopy. Whereas uninterrupted α‐helical aggregates are found at neutral pH, Coulomb repulsions between lysine residues in peptide A destabilize the helical conformation at acidic pH values and trigger an assembly into amyloid‐like fibrils. Peptide B features a glutamate‐based switch functionality and exhibits opposite pH‐dependent folding behavior. In this case, α‐helical aggregates are found under acidic conditions, whereas amyloids are formed at neutral pH. To further validate the pH switch concept, peptide C was designed by including serine residues, thus resulting in an equal distribution of charged residues. Surprisingly, amyloid formation is observed at all pH values investigated for peptide C. The results of further investigations into the effect of different salts, however, strongly support the crucial role of intramolecular charge repulsions in the model system presented herein.
Keywords:α    β  structural transitions  amyloids  coiled‐coil folding  protein models  self‐assembly
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