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1.
Amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) plays a critical role in Alzheimer's disease (AD). The monomeric state of Abeta can self-assemble into oligomers, protofibrils, and amyloid fibrils. Since the fibrils and soluble oligomers are believed to be responsible for AD, the construction of molecules capable of capturing these species could prove valuable as a means of detecting these potentially toxic species and of providing information pertinent for designing drugs effective against AD. To this aim, we have designed short peptides with various hydrophobicities based on the sequence of Abeta14-23, which is a critical region for amyloid fibril formation. The binding of the designed peptides to Abeta and the amplification of the formation of peptide amyloid-like fibrils coassembled with Abeta are elucidated. A fluorescence assay utilizing thioflavin T, known to bind specifically to amyloid fibrils, revealed that two designed peptides (LF and VF, with the leucine and valine residues, respectively, in the hydrophobic core region) could form amyloid-like fibrils effectively by using mature Abeta1-42 fibrils as nuclei. Peptide LF also coassembled with soluble Abeta oligomers into peptide fibrils. Various analyses, including immunostaining with gold nanoparticles, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, and size-exclusion chromatography, confirmed that the LF and VF peptides formed amyloid-like fibrils by capturing and incorporating Abeta1-42 aggregates into their peptide fibrils. In this system, small amounts of mature Abeta1-42 fibrils or soluble oligomers could be transformed into peptide fibrils and detected by amplifying the amyloid-like fibrils with the designed peptides.  相似文献   

2.
Ionic-complementary peptides (ICPs) are well known for their strong propensity to form amyloid-like β-sheet fibrils. Here, we present the first example that α-helical based ICPs can self-assemble into a highly ordered fibrillar structure. Intriguingly, the individual α-helices in such fibrils are arranged shoulder-to-shoulder, making them distinct from conventional coiled-coil-based fibrils.  相似文献   

3.
The cationic peptide [KIGAKI](3) was designed as an amphiphilic β-strand and serves as a model for β-sheet aggregation in membranes. Here, we have characterized its molecular conformation, membrane alignment, and dynamic behavior using solid-state (19)F NMR. A detailed structure analysis of selectively (19)F-labeled peptides was carried out in oriented DMPC bilayers. It showed a concentration-dependent transition from monomeric β-strands to oligomeric β-sheets. In both states, the rigid (19)F-labeled side chains project straight into the lipid bilayer but they experience very different mobilities. At low peptide-to-lipid ratios ≤1:400, monomeric [KIGAKI](3) swims around freely on the membrane surface and undergoes considerable motional averaging, with essentially uncoupled φ/ψ torsion angles. The flexibility of the peptide backbone in this 2D plane is reminiscent of intrinsically unstructured proteins in 3D. At high concentrations, [KIGAKI](3) self-assembles into immobilized β-sheets, which are untwisted and lie flat on the membrane surface as amyloid-like fibrils. This is the first time the transition of monomeric β-strands into oligomeric β-sheets has been characterized by solid-state NMR in lipid bilayers. It promises to be a valuable approach for studying membrane-induced amyloid formation of many other, clinically relevant peptide systems.  相似文献   

4.
We present the 2D self-assembly properties of an amyloid-like peptide (LSFDNSGAITIG-NH2) (i.e., LSFD) over a whole range of spatial scales. This peptide is known to adopt an amyloid-like behavior in water where it aggregates into fibrils. Monolayers of this 12 amino acid peptide were built by direct spreading and compression of an organic unstructured LSFD solution at the air/water interface. Investigation by infrared spectroscopy of the peptide secondary structure reveals beta-sheet formation at the water surface. As evidenced by Brewster angle microscopy, compression of the peptidic film results in the formation of large condensed domains. We used atomic force microscopy to show that these domains are made of rather monodisperse, elongated domains of monomolecular thickness, which are about 1 microm long and hundred of nanometers wide. These nanodomains can be compacted up to the formation of a homogeneous monolayer on the micrometer scale. These bidimensional structures appear as a surface-induced counterpart of the bulk amyloid fibrils that do not form at the air/water interface. These self-assembled peptide nanostructures are also very promising for building organized nanomaterials.  相似文献   

5.
The 17-residue N-terminus (htt(NT)) directly flanking the polyQ sequence in huntingtin (htt) N-terminal fragments plays a crucial role in initiating and accelerating the aggregation process that is associated with Huntington's disease pathogenesis. Here we report on magic-angle-spinning solid-state NMR studies of the amyloid-like aggregates of an htt N-terminal fragment. We find that the polyQ portion of this peptide exists in a rigid, dehydrated amyloid core that is structurally similar to simpler polyQ fibrils and may contain antiparallel β-sheets. In contrast, the htt(NT) sequence in the aggregates is composed in part of a well-defined helix, which likely also exists in early oligomeric aggregates. Further NMR experiments demonstrate that the N-terminal helical segment displays increased dynamics and water exposure. Given its specific contribution to the initiation, rate, and mechanism of fibril formation, the helical nature of htt(NT) and its apparent lack of effect on the polyQ fibril core structure seem surprising. The results provide new details about these disease-associated aggregates and also provide a clear example of an amino acid sequence that greatly enhances the rate of amyloid formation while itself not taking part in the amyloid structure. There is an interesting mechanistic analogy to recent reports pointing out the early-stage contributions of transient intermolecular helix-helix interactions in the aggregation behavior of various other amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

6.
Many unrelated proteins and peptides can assemble into amyloid or amyloid-like nanostructures, all of which share the cross-beta motif of repeat arrays of beta-strands hydrogen-bonded along the fibril axis. Yet, paradoxically, structurally polymorphic fibrils may derive from the same initial polypeptide sequence. Here, solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SSNMR) analysis of amyloid-like fibrils of the peptide hIAPP 20-29, corresponding to the region S (20)NNFGAILSS (29) of the human islet amyloid polypeptide amylin, reveals that the peptide assembles into two amyloid-like forms, (1) and (2), which have distinct structures at the molecular level. Rotational resonance SSNMR measurements of (13)C dipolar couplings between backbone F23 and I26 of hIAPP 20-29 fibrils are consistent with form (1) having parallel beta-strands and form (2) having antiparallel strands within the beta-sheet layers of the protofilament units. Seeding hIAPP 20-29 with structurally homogeneous fibrils from a 30-residue amylin fragment (hIAPP 8-37) produces morphologically homogeneous fibrils with similar NMR properties to form (1). A model for the architecture of the seeded fibrils is presented, based on the analysis of X-ray fiber diffraction data, combined with an extensive range of SSNMR constraints including chemical shifts, torsional angles, and interatomic distances. The model features a cross-beta spine comprising two beta-sheets with an interface defined by residues F23, A25, and L27, which form a hydrophobic zipper. We suggest that the energies of formation for fibril form containing antiparallel and parallel beta-strands are similar when both configurations can be stabilized by a core of hydrophobic contacts, which has implications for the relationship between amino acid sequence and amyloid polymorphism in general.  相似文献   

7.
FT-IR data of six terminally blocked tripeptides containing Acp (ε-aminocaproic acid) reveals that all of them form supramolecular β-sheets in the solid state. Single crystal X-ray diffraction studies of two peptides not only support this data but also disclose the fact that the supramolecular β-sheet formation is initiated via dimer formation. The Scanning Electron Microscopic images of all peptides exhibit amyloid-like fibrils that show green birefringence after binding with Congo red, which is a characteristic feature of many neurodegenerative disease causing amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

8.
Amyloid formation plays a causative role in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease or Parkinson's disease. Soluble peptides form β-sheets that subsequently rearrange into fibrils and deposit as amyloid plaques. Many parameters trigger and influence the onset of the β-sheet formation. Early stages are recently discussed to be cell-toxic. Aiming at understanding various triggers such as interactions with hydrophobic-hydrophilic interfaces and metal ion complexation and their interplay, we investigated a set of model peptides at the air-water interface. We are using a general approach to a variety of diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and type II diabetes that are connected to amyloid formation. Surface sensitive techniques combined with film balance measurements have been used to assess the conformation of the peptides and their orientation at the air-water interface (IR reflection-absorption spectroscopy). Additionally, the structures of the peptide layers were characterized by grazing incidence X-ray diffraction and X-ray reflectivity. The peptides adsorb to the air-water interface and immediately adopt an α-helical conformation. This helical intermediate transforms into β-sheets upon further triggering. The factors that result in β-sheet formation are dependent on the peptide sequence. In general, the interface has the strongest effect on peptide conformation compared to high concentrations or metal ions. Metal ions are able to prevent aggregation in bulk but not at the interface. At the interface, metal ion complexation has only minor effects on the peptide secondary structure, influencing the in-plane structure that is formed in two dimensions. At the air-water interface, increased concentrations or a parallel arrangement of the α-helical intermediates are the most effective triggers. This study reveals the role of various triggers for β-sheet formation and their complex interplay. Our main finding is that the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface largely governs the conformation of peptides. Therefore, the present study implies that special care is needed when interpreting data that may be affected by different amounts or types of interfaces during experimentation.  相似文献   

9.
Amyloid fibrils are affiliated with various human pathologies. Knowledge of their molecular architecture is necessary for a detailed understanding of the mechanism of fibril formation. Vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectroscopy has recently shown sensitivity to amyloid fibrils [Ma et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 12364 and Measey et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2009, 131, 18218]. In particular, amyloid fibrils give rise to an intensity enhanced signal in the amide I band region of the corresponding VCD spectrum, offering promise of utilizing such a method for probing fibrillogenesis and the chiral structure of fibrils. Herein, we further investigate this phenomenon and demonstrate the use of VCD to probe the fibril formation kinetics of a short alanine-rich peptide. To elucidate the origin of the anomalous VCD intensity enhancement, we use an excitonic coupling model to simulate the VCD spectrum of stacked β-sheets containing one (Ising-like model) and two amide I oscillators per strand, as models for the underlying amyloid-fibril secondary structure. With this simple model, we show that the VCD intensity enhancement of amyloid-like fibrils results from intrasheet and, to a more limited extent, also from intersheet vibrational coupling between stacked β-sheets. The enhancement requires helically twisted sheets and is most pronounced for arrangements with parallel-oriented strands. Both the intersheet distance and the orientation of the amide I transition dipole moments of neighboring sheets are found to modulate the intensity enhancement of the amide I VCD signal. Moreover, our simulations suggest that, depending on the three-dimensional arrangement of the β-strands, the sign of the VCD signal of amyloid-like fibrils can be used to distinguish between right- and left-handed helical twists of parallel-oriented β-sheets. We compare the results of our simulation to experimental spectra of two short peptides, GNNQQNY, the N-terminal peptide fragment of the yeast prion protein Sup35, and an amyloidogenic alanine-rich peptide, AKY8. Our results demonstrate the advantages of using VCD spectroscopy to probe the kinetics of peptide and protein aggregation as well as the chirality of the resulting supramolecular structure.  相似文献   

10.
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.  相似文献   

11.
One of the hallmarks of Alzheimers disease is the deposition of amyloid plaques, which consist of β‐amyloid (Aβ) peptides in fibrillar states. Nonfibrillar Aβ aggregates have been considered as an important intermediate in the pathway of fibrillization, but little is known about the formation mechanism. The on‐pathway β‐sheet intermediates of Aβ40 peptides can be trapped by incubating the peptides in liposomes formed by zwitterionic lipids. The aggregates of Aβ40 peptides have been prepared at a peptide concentration of less than 10 μm . Solid‐state NMR spectroscopy data show that the backbone conformation of the aggregates is almost identical to that of the fibrils formed in free solution. In contrast to anionic lipids, zwitterionic lipids, which are typical of neuronal soma, did not induce any significant conformational difference in Aβ40 fibrils. This liposome–Aβ system may serve as a useful model to study the fibril formation mechanism.  相似文献   

12.
Amyloid fibers are aggregates of proteins. They are built out of a peptide called beta-amyloid (Abeta) containing between 41 and 43 residues, produced by the action of an enzyme which cleaves a much larger protein known as the amyloid precursor protein (APP). X-ray diffraction experiments have shown that these fibrils are rich in beta-structures, whereas the shape of the peptide displays an alpha-helix structure within the APP in its biologically active conformation. A realistic model of fibril formation is developed based on the 17 residues Abeta12-28 amyloid peptide, which has been shown to form fibrils structurally similar to those of the whole Abeta peptide. With the help of physical arguments and in keeping with experimental findings, the Abeta12-28 monomer is assumed to be in four possible states (i.e., native helix conformation, beta-hairpin, globular low-energy state, and unfolded state). Making use of these monomeric states, oligomers (dimers, tertramers, and octamers) were constructed. With the help of short, detailed molecular dynamics calculations of the three monomers and of a variety of oligomers, energies for these structures were obtained. Making use of these results within the framework of a simple yet realistic model to describe the entropic terms associated with the variety of amyloid conformations, a phase diagram can be calculated of the whole many-body system, leading to a thermodynamical picture in overall agreement with the experimental findings. In particular, the existence of micellar metastable states seem to be a key issue to determine the thermodynamical properties of the system.  相似文献   

13.
Pulsed-field gradient 1H NMR is employed to investigate the self-diffusion of amyloid Aβ-peptide in an aqueous buffer solution (pH 7.44) with a protein concentration of 50 μmol at 20°C. The self-diffusion coefficient of the peptide in a freshly prepared solution corresponds to its monomeric form. The storage of the solution at 24°C causes part of the peptide molecules to form amyloid aggregates as soon as over 48 h. However, the 1H NMR echo signal typical of aggregated molecules is not observed because of their dense packing in the aggregates and a large mass of the latter. A freezing-fusion of the solution after the aggregation does not cause changes in the self-diffusion coefficients of the peptide. After a peptide solution free of amyloid aggregates is subjected to a freezing-fusion cycle, part of the peptide molecules also remains in the monomeric form in the solution, while another part forms amyloid aggregates, with a portion of the aggregated peptide molecules retaining a high rotational mobility with virtually absolute absence of a translational mobility. The results obtained are interpreted in terms of the formation of “porous aggregates” of amyloid fibrils, with “pores” having sizes comparable with those of peptide molecules, though, being larger than water molecules. Peptide molecules, which do not form fibrils, are captured in the pores. Temperature regime is shown to be of importance for the aggregation of amyloid peptides. In particular, freezing, which is traditionally considered to be a method for the prevention from or temporary interruption of aggregation, may itself lead to the formation of amorphous amyloid aggregates, which remain preserved in solutions after their unfreezing.  相似文献   

14.
Starting from a disordered aggregate, we have simulated the formation of ordered amyloid-like beta structures in a system formed by 18 polyvaline chains in explicit solvent, employing molecular dynamics accelerated by bias-exchange metadynamics. We exploited 8 different collective variables to compute the free energy of hundreds of putative aggregate structures, with variable content of parallel and antiparallel β-sheets and different packing among the sheets. This allowed characterizing in detail a possible nucleation pathway for the formation of amyloid fibrils: first the system forms a relatively large ordered nucleus of antiparallel β-sheets, and then a few parallel sheets start appearing. The relevant nucleation process culminates at this point: when a sufficient number of parallel sheets is formed, the free energy starts to decrease toward a new minimum in which this structure is predominant. The complex nucleation pathway we found cannot be described within classical nucleation theory, namely employing a unique simple reaction coordinate like the total content of β-sheets.  相似文献   

15.
Recent studies suggest that soluble oligomers of amyloid-forming peptides have toxic effects in cell cultures. In this study, the folding of three Alzheimer's A beta(16-22) peptides have been simulated with the activation-relaxation technique and a generic energy model. Starting from randomly chosen states, the predicted lowest energy structure superposes within 1 A rms deviation from its conformation within the fibrils. This antiparallel structure is found to be in equilibrium with several out-of-register antiparallel beta-sheets and mixed parallel-antiparallel beta-sheets, indicating that full structural order in the fibrils requires larger aggregates. Folding involves the formation of dimers followed by the addition of a monomer and proceeds through a generalized mechanism between disordered and native alignments of beta-strands.  相似文献   

16.
Amyloid diseases are a serious cause for concern world-wide. To understand the mechanism of formation of the fibrillar structures associated with such disorders, it is necessary to study the progression from soluble protein or peptide monomer through an array of oligomers to the final, insoluble, fibrils. The protein IAPP is found in vivo in the form of insoluble amyloid deposits in the pancreatic islets of diabetes type II sufferers. Here, we have studied the in vitro self-aggregation of three fibril-forming peptides from the amyloidogenic core of IAPP. Using electrospray ionization—mass spectrometry coupled with ion mobility spectrometry, the mass and cross-sectional area of each oligomer present in the heterogeneous assembly mixtures can be determined individually in a single, rapid experiment over time. For the three peptides studied, oligomers ≤20-mer were characterized. Conversely, no oligomers higher than a dimer were detected for a non-assembling peptide control. The rate in which the cross-sectional area of the oligomers increases with increasing number of peptide sub-units indicates that assembly for the amyloid-forming peptides proceeds in a linear fashion until an oligomer of a certain size is attained. After this, a step increase in cross-sectional area occurs for the next higher-order oligomer. This behaviour can be explained by molecular modelling of singly, doubly, triply and quadruply stacked β-stranded structures. Using one peptide as an example, the cross-sectional areas of the lower order oligomers (dimer to pentamer) were found to be consistent with a single β-sheet model, whereas the higher order oligomers were consistent with double-stranded (hexamer to decamer oligomers), triply-stranded (11-mers to 15-mers) and quadruply-stranded (16-mers to 20-mers) β-sheet models.  相似文献   

17.
《Chemistry & biology》1997,4(5):345-355
Background: Peptides derived from three of four putative α-helical regions of the prion protein (PrP) form amyloid in solution. These peptides serve as models for amyloidogenesis and for understanding the α helix → β strand conformational change that is responsible for the development of disease. Kinetic studies of amyloid formation usually rely on the detection of fibrils. No study has yet explored the rate of monomer peptide uptake or the presence of nonfibrillar intermediate species. We present a new electron spin resonance (ESR) method for probing the kinetics of amyloid formation. A spin label was covalently attached to a highly amyloidogenic peptide and kinetic trials were monitored by ESR.Results: Electron microscopy shows that the spin-labeled peptide forms amyloid, and ESR reveals the kinetic decay of free peptide monomer during amyloid formation. The combination of electron microscopy and ESR suggests that there are three kinetically relevant species: monomer peptide, amyloid and amorphous aggregate (peptide aggregates devoid of fibrils or other structures with long-range order). A rather surprising result is that amyloid formation requires the presence of this amorphous aggregate. This is particularly interesting because PrPSc the form of PrP associated with scrapie, is often found as an aggregate and amyloid formation is not a necessary component of prion replication or pathogenesis.Conclusions: Kinetic analysis of the time-dependent data suggests a model whereby the amorphous aggregate has a previously unsuspected dual role: it releases monomer into solution and also provides initiation sites for fibril growth. These findings suggest that the β-sheet-rich PrPSc may be stabilized by aggregation.  相似文献   

18.
Short peptides derived from p14ARF and Hdm2 (14 and 15 amino acids in length, respectively), two cancer associated proteins, have been found to co-assemble into amyloid-like structures. Larger protein domains containing these peptide segments interact in cells and also undergo a disorder-to-order transition upon binding in vitro. In contrast to the association of beta-strand assemblies with amyloid diseases, the system described herein utilizes the formation of binary, extended beta-strands as a novel mechanism of biomolecular assembly. The beta-strand-containing fibrils formed from these peptides may allow the directed assembly of decorated fibrils with applications as biological nanostructures.  相似文献   

19.
The aggregation of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta(1-40)) into fibrils is a key pathological process associated with Alzheimer's disease. This work has investigated the micellization process of biosurfactant surfactin and its effect on the aggregation behavior of Abeta(1-40). The results show that surfactin has strong self-assembly ability to form micelles and the micelles tend to form larger aggregates. Surfactin adopts a beta-turn conformation at low micelle concentration but a beta-sheet conformation at high micelle concentration. The effect of surfactin on the Abeta(1-40) aggregation behavior exhibits a strong concentration-dependent fashion. Below the critical micelle concentration of surfactin, the electrostatic binding of surfactin monomers on Abeta(1-40) causes Abeta(1-40) molecules to unfold. Assisted by the hydrophobic interaction among surfactin monomers on the Abeta(1-40) chain, the conformation of Abeta(1-40) transfers to the beta-sheet structure, which promotes the formation of fibrils. At low surfactin micelle concentration, besides the electrostatic force and hydrophobic interaction, hydrogen bonds formed between surfactin micelles and adjacent Abeta(1-40) peptide chains may promote the ordered organization of these Abeta(1-40) peptide chains, thus leading to the formation of beta-sheets and fibrils to a great extent. At high surfactin micelle concentration, the separating of Abeta(1-40) chains by the excessive surfactin micelles and the aggregation of the complexes of Abeta(1-40) with surfactin micelles inhibit the formation of beta-sheets and fibrils.  相似文献   

20.
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