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1.
Calcitonin, a peptide hormone associated with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid, has the potential to form amyloid fibrils and may be a valuable model for investigating the role of peptide-membrane interactions in beta-sheet and amyloid formation. Via a new model peptide system, bovine calcitonin, we found that the exposure of peptide to phospholipid membranes altered its structure relative to the structures formed in aqueous solutions. Of particular relevance to the amyloidoses, incubation of calcitonin with cholesterol-rich and ganglioside-containing membranes resulted in significant enrichment in the beta-sheet and amyloid content of the peptide. The formation of amyloid was also accelerated in these systems. A correlation between the phospholipid-induced structural alterations and calcitonin binding affinities to phospholipid membranes was evident. Bovine calcitonin has considerably higher binding affinity for the phospholipid systems that enhanced its beta-sheet and amyloid structure. Electrostatic forces were not the governing forces behind the observed behavior, as supported by the fact that the ionic strength did not affect the peptide structures or binding affinities. A Van't Hoff analysis of the temperature-dependent peptide binding affinities indicated that binding led to an increase in enthalpy and possibly an increase in entropy of the peptide-membrane systems. Experiments with other amyloid-forming peptides such as beta-amyloid of Alzheimer's disease have also shown similar results and may indicate the need to manipulate peptide-membrane interactions in order to control amyloid formation and its associated disease.  相似文献   

2.
Prion diseases are neurodegenerative disorders associated with a conformational change in the normal cellular isoform of the prion protein, PrP(C), to an abnormal scrapie isoform, PrP(SC). Unlike the alpha-helical PrP(C), the protease-resistant core of PrP(SC) is predominantly beta-sheet and possesses a tendency to polymerize into amyloid fibrils. We performed experiments with two synthetic human prion peptides, PrP(106-126) and PrP(127-147), to determine how peptide structure affects neurotoxicity and protein-membrane interactions. Peptide solutions possessing beta-sheet and amyloid structures were neurotoxic to PC12 cells in vitro and bound with measurable affinities to cholesterol-rich phospholipid membranes at ambient conditions, but peptide solutions lacking stable beta-sheet structures and amyloid content were nontoxic and possessed less than one tenth of the binding affinities of the amyloid-containing peptides. Regardless of structure, the peptide binding affinities to cholesterol-depleted membranes were greatly reduced. These results suggest that the beta-sheet and amyloid structures of the prion peptides give rise to their toxicity and membrane binding affinities and that membrane binding affinity, especially in cholesterol-rich environments, may be related to toxicity. Our results may have significance in understanding the role of the fibrillogenic cerebral deposits associated with some of the prion diseases in neurodegeneration and may have implications for other amyloidoses.  相似文献   

3.
Koppaka V  Axelsen PH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(32):10011-10016
The fully developed lesion of Alzheimer's Disease is a dense plaque composed of fibrillar amyloid beta-proteins with a characteristic and well-ordered beta-sheet secondary structure. Because the incipient lesion most likely develops when these proteins are first induced to form beta-sheet secondary structure, it is important to understand factors that induce amyloid beta-proteins to adopt this conformation. In this investigation we used a novel form of infrared spectroscopy that can characterize the conformation, orientation, and rate of accumulation of the protein on various lipid membranes to determine whether oxidatively damaged phospholipid membranes induce the formation of beta-sheet secondary structure in a 42-residue amyloid beta-protein. We found that membranes containing oxidatively damaged phospholipids accumulated amyloid beta-protein significantly faster than membranes containing only unoxidized or saturated phospholipids. Accelerated accumulation was also seen when 3 mol % G(M1) ganglioside was incorporated into a saturated phosphatidylcholine membrane. The accumulated protein more completely adopted a beta-sheet conformation on oxidized membranes, and the plane of the beta-sheet was oriented parallel to the plane of the membrane. These results indicate that oxidatively damaged phospholipid membranes promote beta-sheet formation by amyloid beta-proteins, and they suggest a possible role for lipid peroxidation in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's Disease.  相似文献   

4.
Amyloid peptide (Abeta) is the major protein constituent of neuritic plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD). This peptide is an amphipathic molecule that perturbs membranes and binds to raft-like membranes composed of gangliosides. Ganglioside GM1 binds tightly with Abeta and it is speculated that GM1 inhibits Abeta from undergoing alpha-helix to beta-sheet conformational changes. Although the role of gangliosides in conformational changes of Abeta have been studied, the specific nature of these interactions have not been reported. In the present report multidimensional NMR studies of ganglioside-Abeta interactions were conducted in sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) micelles, a membrane-mimicking environment. These studies reveal that asialoGM1 binds specifically with Abeta in a manner which could prevent beta-sheet formation. but that ganglioside GT1b does not bind Abeta. Plausible pathways for the involvement of gangliosides in amyloidogenesis are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), a detergent that mimics some characteristics of biological membranes, has been found to affect significantly fibril formation by a peptide from human complement receptor 1. In aqueous solution the peptide is unfolded but slowly aggregates to form fibrils. In sub-micellar concentrations of SDS the peptide is initially alpha-helical but converts rapidly to a beta-sheet structure and large quantities of fibrils form. In SDS above the critical micellar concentration the peptide adopts a stable alpha-helical structure and no fibrils are observed. These findings demonstrate the sensitivity of fibril formation to solution conditions and suggest a possible role for membrane components in amyloid fibril formation in living systems.  相似文献   

6.
Solvent effects on self-assembly of beta-amyloid peptide.   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
beta-amyloid peptide (A beta) is the primary protein component of senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease patients. Synthetic A beta spontaneously assembles into amyloid fibrils and is neurotoxic to cortical cultures. Neurotoxicity has been associated with the degree of peptide aggregation, yet the mechanism of assembly of A beta into amyloid fibrils is poorly understood. In this work, A beta was dissolved in several different solvents commonly used in neurotoxicity assays. In pure dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), A beta had no detectable beta-sheet content; in 0.1% trifluoroacetate, the peptide contained one-third beta-sheet; and in 35% acetonitrile/0.1% trifluoroacetate, A beta was two-thirds beta-sheet, equivalent to the fibrillar peptide in physiological buffer. Stock solutions of peptide were diluted into phosphate-buffered saline, and fibril growth was followed by static and dynamic light scattering. The growth rate was substantially faster when the peptide was predissolved in 35% acetonitrile/0.1% trifluoroacetate than in 0.1% trifluoroacetate, 10% DMSO, or 100% DMSO. Differences in growth rate were attributed to changes in the secondary structure of the peptide in the stock solvent. These results suggest that formation of an intermediate with a high beta-sheet content is a controlling step in A beta self-assembly.  相似文献   

7.
Masaki Wakabayashi 《FEBS letters》2009,583(17):2854-36097
Human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) is the primary component of the amyloid deposits found in the pancreatic islets of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. However, it is unknown how amyloid fibrils are formed in vivo. In this study, we demonstrate that gangliosides play an essential role in the formation of amyloid deposits by hIAPP on plasma membranes. Amyloid fibrils accumulated in ganglioside- and cholesterol-rich microscopic domains (‘lipid rafts’). The depletion of gangliosides or cholesterol significantly reduced the amount of amyloid deposited. These results clearly showed that the formation of amyloid fibrils was mediated by gangliosides in lipid rafts.  相似文献   

8.
beta-Amyloid (Abeta) is the primary protein component of senile plaques associated with Alzheimer's disease and has been implicated in the neurotoxicity associated with the disease. A variety of evidence points to the importance of Abeta-membrane interactions in the mechanism of Abeta neurotoxicity and indicates that cholesterol and gangliosides are particularly important for Abeta aggregation and binding to membranes. We investigated the effects of cholesterol and sialic acid depletion on Abeta-induced GTPase activity in cells, a step implicated in the mechanism of Abeta toxicity, and Abeta-induced cell toxicity. Cholesterol reduction and depletion of membrane-associated sialic acid residues both significantly reduced the Abeta-induced GTPase activity. In addition, cholesterol and membrane-associated sialic acid residue depletion or inhibition of cholesterol and ganglioside synthesis protected PC12 cells from Abeta-induced toxicity. These results indicate the importance of Abeta-membrane interactions in the mechanism of Abeta toxicity. In addition, these results suggest that control of cellular cholesterol and/or ganglioside content may prove useful in the prevention or treatment of Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

9.
It is important to understand the Amyloid fibril formation in view of numerous medical and biochemical aspects. Structural determination of amyloid fibril has been extensively studied using electron microscopy. Subsequently, solid state NMR spectroscopy has been realized to be the most important means to determine not only microscopic molecular structure but also macroscopic molecular packing. Molecular structure of amyloid fibril was first predicted to be parallel beta-sheet structure, and subsequently, was further refined for Abeta(1-40) to be cross beta-sheet with double layered in register parallel beta-sheet structure by using solid state NMR spectroscopy. On the other hand, anti-parallel beta-sheet structure has been reported to short fragments of Abeta-amyloid and other amyloid forming peptides. Kinetic study of amyloid fibril formation has been studied using a variety of methods, and two-step autocatalytic reaction mechanism used to explain fibril formation. Recently, stable intermediates or proto-fibrils have been observed by electron microscope (EM) images. Some of the intermediates have the same microscopic structure as the matured fibril and subsequently change to matured fibrils. Another important study on amyloid fibril formation is determination of the interaction with lipid membranes, since amyloid peptide are cleaved from amyloid precursor proteins in the membrane interface, and it is reported that amyloid lipid interaction is related to the cytotoxicity. Finally it is discussed how amyloid fibril formation can be inhibited. Firstly, properly designed compounds are reported to have inhibition ability of amyloid fibril formation by interacting with amyloid peptide. Secondly, it is revealed that site directed mutation can inhibit amyloid fibril formation. These inhibitors were developed by knowing the fibril structure determined by solid state NMR.  相似文献   

10.
Beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta), which is cleaved from the larger trans-membrane amyloid precursor protein, is found deposited in the brain of patients suffering from Alzheimer's disease and is linked with neurotoxicity. We report the results of studies of Abeta1-42 and the effect of metal ions (Cu2+ and Zn2+) on model membranes using 31P and 2H solid-state NMR, fluorescence and Langmuir Blodgett monolayer methods. Both the peptide and metal ions interact with the phospholipid headgroups and the effects on the lipid bilayer and the peptide structure were different for membrane incorporated or associated peptides. Copper ions alone destabilise the lipid bilayer and induced formation of smaller vesicles but when Abeta1-42 was associated with the bilayer membrane copper did not have this effect. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicated that Abeta1-42 adopted more beta-sheet structure when incorporated in a lipid bilayer in comparison to the associated peptide, which was largely unstructured. Incorporated peptides appear to disrupt the membrane more severely than associated peptides, which may have implications for the role of Abeta in disease states.  相似文献   

11.
A major hallmark of prion diseases is the cerebral amyloid accumulation of the pathogenic PrP(Sc), an abnormally misfolded, protease-resistant, and beta-sheet rich protein. PrP106-126 is the key domain responsible for the conformational conversion and aggregation of PrP. It shares important physicochemical characteristics with PrP(Sc) and presents similar neurotoxicity as PrP(Sc). By combination of fluorescence polarization, dye release assay and in situ time-lapse atomic force microscopy (AFM), we investigated the PrP106-126 amide interacting with the large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) and the supported lipid bilayers (SLBs). The results suggest that the interactions involve a poration-mediated process: firstly, the peptide binding results in the formation of pores in the membranes, which penetrate only half of the membranes; subsequently, PrP106-126 amide undergoes the poration-mediated diffusion in the SLBs, represented by the formation and expansion of the flat high-rise domains (FHDs). The possible mechanisms of the interactions between PrP106-126 amide and lipid membranes are proposed based on our observations.  相似文献   

12.
Human calcitonin (hCT) is a 32-residue peptide that aggregates to form amyloid fibrils under appropriate conditions. In this study, we investigated the effect of the intramolecular disulfide bond formed at the N-terminal region of the peptide in the aggregation kinetics of hCT. Our results indicate that the presence of the disulfide bond in hCT plays a crucial role in forming the critical nucleus needed for fibril formation, facilitating the rate of hCT amyloidogenesis. Furthermore, we reported for the first time the effects of cholesterol, cholesterol sulfate, and 3β-[N-(dimethylaminoethane)carbamoyl]-cholesterol (DC-cholesterol) on the amyloid formation of oxidized hCT. Our results show that while cholesterol does not affect amyloidogenesis of oxidized hCT, high concentrations of cholesterol sulfate exhibits a moderate inhibiting activity on hCT amyloid formation. In particular, our results show that DC-cholesterol strongly inhibits amyloidogenesis of oxidized hCT in a dose-dependent manner. Further studies at different pH conditions imply the crucial impact of electrostatic and hydrogen bonding interactions in mediating the interplay of hCT and the surface of DC-cholesterol vesicles and the inhibiting function of DC-cholesterol on hCT fibrillization.  相似文献   

13.
The process of amyloid fibril formation by the human calcitonin hormone is associated with medullary thyroid carcinoma. Based on the effect of pH on the fibrillization of human calcitonin, the analysis of conformationally constrained analogues of the hormone, and our suggestion regarding the role of aromatic residues in the process of amyloid fibril formation, we studied the ability of a short aromatic charged peptide fragment of calcitonin (NH(2)-DFNKF-COOH) to form amyloid fibrils. Here, using structural and biophysical analysis, we clearly demonstrate the ability of this short peptide to form well ordered amyloid fibrils. A shorter truncated tetrapeptide, NH(2)-DFNK-COOH, also formed fibrils albeit less ordered than those formed by the pentapeptide. We could not detect amyloid fibril formation by the NH(2)-FNKF-COOH tetrapeptide, the NH(2)-DFN-COOH tripeptide, or the NH(2)-DANKA-COOH phenylalanine to the alanine analogue of the pentapeptide. The formation of amyloid fibrils by rather hydrophilic peptides is quite striking, because it was speculated that hydrophobic interactions might play a key role in amyloid formation. This is the first reported case of fibril formation by a peptide as short as a tetrapeptide and one of very few cases of amyloid formation by pentapeptides. Because the aromatic nature seems to be the only common property of the various very short amyloid-forming peptides, it further supports our hypothesis on the role of aromatic interactions in the process of amyloid fibril formation.  相似文献   

14.
Most of the disease causing proteins such as beta amyloid, amylin, and huntingtin protein, which are natively disordered, readily form fibrils consisting of beta-sheet polymers. Though all amyloid fibrils are made up of beta-sheet polymers, not all peptides with predominant beta-sheet content in the native state develop into amyloid fibrils. We hypothesize that stable amyloid like fibril formation may require mixture of different conformational states in the peptide. We have tested this hypothesis on amyloid forming peptide namely HCl(Ile)(5)NH(CH(2)CH(2)O)(3)CH(3) (I). We show peptide I, has propensity to form self-assembled structures of beta-sheets in aqueous solutions. When incubated over a period of time in aqueous buffer, I self assembled into beta sheet like structures with diameters ranging from 30 to 60 A that bind with amyloidophilic dyes like Congo red and Thioflavin T. Interestingly peptide I developed into unstable fibrils after prolonged aging at higher concentration in contrast with the general mature fibril-forming propensity of various amyloid petides known to date.  相似文献   

15.
The neurodegenerative illness Familial Danish Dementia (FDD) is linked to formation and aggregation of the 34-residue ADan peptide, whose cytotoxicity may be mediated by membrane interactions. Here we characterize the derived peptide SerADan, in which the two cysteines found in ADan have been changed to serines to emulate the reduced peptide. SerADan aggregates rapidly at pH 5.0 and 7.5 in a series of conformational transitions to form beta-sheet rich fibril-like structures, which nevertheless do not bind amyloid-specific dyes, probably due to the absence of organized beta-sheet contacts. Aggregation is prevented at neutral/acidic pH and low ionic strength by anionic lipid vesicles. These vesicles are permeabilized by monomeric SerADan assembling on the membrane to form stable beta-sheet structures which are different from the solution aggregates. In contrast, solution ageing of SerADan first reduces and then abolishes permeabilization properties. The competition between lipid binding and aggregation may reflect bifurcating pathways for the ADan peptide in vivo between accumulation of inert aggregates and formation of cytotoxic permeabilizing species. Our work demonstrates that non-fibrillar aggregates can assemble in a series of steps to form a hierarchy of higher-order assemblies, where rapid formation of stable local beta-sheet structure may prevent rearrangement to amyloid proper.  相似文献   

16.
Tracz SM  Abedini A  Driscoll M  Raleigh DP 《Biochemistry》2004,43(50):15901-15908
Numerous polypeptides and proteins form amyloid deposits in vivo or in vitro. The mechanism of amyloid formation is not well-understood particularly in the case where unstructured polypeptides assemble to form amyloid. Aromatic-aromatic interactions are known to be important in globular proteins, and the possibility that they might play a key role in amyloid formation has been raised. The results of Ala-scanning experiments on short polypeptides derived from Amylin have suggested that aromatic interactions could be particularly important for this system. Here, we examine a set of Amylin-derived polypeptides in which the single aromatic residue has been substituted with a Leu and Ala. A peptide corresponding to residues 21-29 with a Phe-23 to Leu substitution, a free N terminus, and amidated C terminus readily forms amyloid. Shorter peptides derived from the putative minimal amyloid-forming segment of Amylin, residues 22-27, also form amyloid when Phe-23 is replaced by Leu. Amyloid formation is more facile when the N terminus is deprotonated and the peptide is uncharged. Substitution of the Phe with Ala results in a peptide that is noticeably less prone to form amyloid. A peptide corresponding to residues 10-19 of human Amylin with blocked termini and the sole aromatic residue, Phe-15, substituted by Leu readily forms amyloid. A Phe-15 to Ala substitution reduces significantly the ability to form amyloid. These results indicate that an aromatic residue is not required for amyloid formation in these systems and indicates that other factors such as size, beta-sheet propensity, and hydrophobicity of the side chain in question are also important.  相似文献   

17.
The beta-sheet plaques that are the most obvious pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease are composed of amyloid-beta peptides and are highly enriched in the metal ions Zn, Fe and Cu. The interaction of the full-length amyloid peptide, A beta(1-42), with phospholipid lipid bilayers was studied in the presence of the metal-chelating drug, Clioquinol (CQ). The effect of cholesterol and metal ions was also determined using solid-state 31P and 2H NMR. CQ modulated the effect of metal ions on the integrity of the bilayer and although CQ perturbed the phospholipid membrane, the bilayer integrity was maintained. Model membranes enriched in cholesterol were studied under conditions of peptide association and incorporation. Solid-state NMR showed that the bilayer integrity was preserved in cholesterol-enriched membranes in comparison to phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylserine bilayers. Changes in peptide structure, consistent with an increase in beta-sheet, were observed using specifically 13C-labelled A beta(1-42) by magic angle spinning NMR. Results using aligned phosphatidylcholine bilayers and completely 15N-labelled peptide indicated that the peptide aggregated. The results are consistent with oligomeric beta-sheet structured peptides only partially penetrating the bilayer and cholesterol reducing the membrane disruption.  相似文献   

18.
Wu C  Lei H  Duan Y 《Biophysical journal》2005,88(4):2897-2906
We observed fast aggregation of partially ordered oligomers in an earlier simulation study of an amyloidogenic hexapeptide NFGAIL. In this work, the nucleation of highly ordered oligomers was further investigated by a combined total of 960 ns molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent on NFGAIL and its nonamyloidogenic mutant NAGAIL. In these simulations, four dimer subunits that each was constrained by harmonic forces as a two-strand beta-sheet were used to enhance the rate of formation. It was found that a critical role played by the aromatic residue Phe was to direct the stacking of beta-sheets to form ordered multilayer aggregates. We also found that many molecular arrangements of the peptide satisfied the "cross-beta-structure", a hallmark of amyloid fibrils. The tendency for the peptide to form either parallel or antiparallel beta-sheet was comparable, as was the tendency for the beta-sheets to stack either in parallel or antiparallel orientation. Overall, approximately 85% of the native hexapeptide formed octamers. The fact that only 8% of the octamers were well-ordered species suggests that the dissociation of the disordered oligomers be the rate-limiting step in the formation of highly ordered oligomers. Among the well-ordered subunit pairs, about half was formed by the beta-sheet extension along the main-chain hydrogen-bond direction, whereas the other half was formed by the beta-sheet stacking. Hence, a delicate balance between intersheet and intrasheet interactions appeared to be crucial in the formation of a highly ordered nucleus of amyloid fibrils. The disordered oligomers were mainly stabilized by nonspecific hydrophobic interactions, whereas the well-ordered oligomers were further stabilized by cross-strand hydrogen bonds and favorable side-chain stacking.  相似文献   

19.
Several proteins and peptides that can convert from alpha-helical to beta-sheet conformation and form amyloid fibrils, including the amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) and the prion protein, contain a discordant alpha-helix that is composed of residues that strongly favor beta-strand formation. In their native states, 37 of 38 discordant helices are now found to interact with other protein segments or with lipid membranes, but Abeta apparently lacks such interactions. The helical propensity of the Abeta discordant region (K16LVFFAED23) is increased by introducing V18A/F19A/F20A replacements, and this is associated with reduced fibril formation. Addition of the tripeptide KAD or phospho-L-serine likewise increases the alpha-helical content of Abeta(12-28) and reduces aggregation and fibril formation of Abeta(1-40), Abeta(12-28), Abeta(12-24), and Abeta(14-23). In contrast, tripeptides with all-neutral, all-acidic or all-basic side chains, as well as phosphoethanolamine, phosphocholine, and phosphoglycerol have no significant effects on Abeta secondary structure or fibril formation. These data suggest that in free Abeta, the discordant alpha-helix lacks stabilizing interactions (likely as a consequence of proteolytic removal from a membrane-associated precursor protein) and that stabilization of this helix can reduce fibril formation.  相似文献   

20.
In this paper we present a detailed atomic model for a protofilament, the most basic organization level, of the amyloid fibre formed by the peptide DFNKF. This pentapeptide is a segment derived from the human calcitonin, a natural amyloidogenic protein. Our model, which represents the outcome of extensive explicit solvent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of different strand/sheet organizations, is a single beta-sheet filament largely without a hydrophobic core. Nevertheless, this structure is capable of reproducing the main features of the characteristic amyloid fibril organization and provides clues to the molecular basis of its experimental aggregation behaviour. Our results show that the side chains' chemical diversity induces the formation of a complex network of interactions that finally determine the microscopic arrangement of the strands at the protofilament level. This network of interactions, consisting of both side chain-side chain and backbone-side chain interactions, confers on the final single beta-sheet arrangement an unexpected stability, both by enhancing the association of related chemical groups and, at the same time, by shielding the hydrophobic segments from the polar solvent. The chemical physical characterization of this protofilament provides hints to the possible thermodynamical basis of the supra molecular organization that allows the formation of the filaments by lateral association of the preformed protofibrils. Its regular, highly polarized structure shows how other protofilaments can assemble. In terms of structural biology, our results clearly indicate that an amyloid organization implies a degree of complexity far beyond a simple nonspecific association of peptide strands via amide hydrogen bonds.  相似文献   

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