首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Abeta fibrils, which are central to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease, form a cross-beta-structure that contains likely parallel beta-sheets with a salt bridge between residues Asp23 and Lys28. Recent studies suggest that soluble oligomers of amyloid peptides have neurotoxic effects in cell cultures, raising the interest in studying the structures of these intermediate forms. Here, we present three models of possible soluble Abeta forms based on the sequences similarities, assumed to support local structural similarities, of the Abeta peptide with fragments of three proteins (adhesin, Semliki Forest virus capsid protein, and transthyretin). These three models share a similar structure in the C-terminal region composed of two beta-strands connected by a loop, which contain the Asp23-Lys28 salt bridge. This segment is also structurally well conserved in Abeta fibril forms. Differences between the three monomeric models occur in the N-terminal region and in the C-terminal tail. These three models might sample some of the most stable conformers of the soluble Abeta peptide within oligomeric assemblies, which were modeled here in the form of dimers, trimers, tetramers, and hexamers. The consistency of these models is discussed with respect to available experimental and theoretical data.  相似文献   

2.
Using the experimental structures of Abeta amyloid fibrils and all-atom molecular dynamics, we study the force-induced unbinding of Abeta peptides from the fibril. We show that the mechanical dissociation of Abeta peptides is highly anisotropic and proceeds via different pathways when force is applied in parallel or perpendicular direction with respect to the fibril axis. The threshold forces associated with lateral unbinding of Abeta peptides exceed those observed during the mechanical dissociation along the fibril axis. In addition, Abeta fibrils are found to be brittle in the lateral direction of unbinding and soft along the fibril axis. Lateral mechanical unbinding and the unbinding along the fibril axis load different types of fibril interactions. Lateral unbinding is primarily determined by the cooperative rupture of fibril backbone hydrogen bonds. The unbinding along the fibril axis largely depends on the interpeptide Lys-Asp electrostatic contacts and the hydrophobic interactions formed by the Abeta C terminal. Due to universality of the amyloid beta structure, the anisotropic mechanical dissociation observed for Abeta fibrils is likely to be applicable to other amyloid assemblies. The estimates of equilibrium forces required to dissociate Abeta peptide from the amyloid fibril suggest that these supramolecular structures are mechanically stronger than most protein domains.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanisms of deposition and dissociation are implicated in the assembly of amyloid fibrils. To investigate the kinetics of unbinding of Abeta(16-22) monomers from preformed fibrils, we use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and the structures for Abeta(16-22) amyloid fibrils. Consistent with experimental studies, the dissociation of Abeta(16-22) peptides involves two main stages, locked and docked, after which peptides unbind. The lifetime of the locked state, in which a peptide retains fibril-like structure and interactions, extends up to 0.5 micros under normal physiological conditions. Upon cooperative rupture of all fibril-like hydrogen bonds (HBs) with the fibril, a peptide enters a docked state. This state is populated by disordered random coil conformations and its lifetime ranges from approximately 10 to 200 ns. The docked state is stabilized by hydrophobic side chain interactions, while the contribution from HBs is small. Our simulations also suggest that the peptides located on fibril edges may form stable beta-strand conformations distinct from the fibril "bulk". We propose that such edge peptides can act as fibril caps, which impede fibril elongation. Our results indicate that the interactions between unbinding peptides constitute the molecular basis for cooperativity of peptide dissociation. The kinetics of fibril growth is reconstructed from unbinding assuming the reversibility of deposition/dissociation pathways. The relation of in silica dissociation kinetics to experimental observations is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Synchrotron x-ray studies on amyloid fibrils have suggested that the stacked pleated beta-sheets are twisted so that a repeating unit of 24 beta-strands forms a helical turn around the fibril axis (. J. Mol. Biol. 273:729-739). Based on this morphological study, we have constructed an atomic model for the twisted pleated beta-sheet of human Abeta amyloid protofilament. In the model, 48 monomers of Abeta 12-42 stack (four per layer) to form a helical turn of beta-sheet. Each monomer is in an antiparallel beta-sheet conformation with a turn located at residues 25-28. Residues 17-21 and 31-36 form a hydrophobic core along the fibril axis. The hydrophobic core should play a critical role in initializing Abeta aggregation and in stabilizing the aggregates. The model was tested using molecular dynamics simulations in explicit aqueous solution, with the particle mesh Ewald (PME) method employed to accommodate long-range electrostatic forces. Based on the molecular dynamics simulations, we hypothesize that an isolated protofilament, if it exists, may not be twisted, as it appears to be when in the fibril environment. The twisted nature of the protofilaments in amyloid fibrils is likely the result of stabilizing packing interactions of the protofilaments. The model also provides a binding mode for Congo red on Abeta amyloid fibrils. The model may be useful for the design of Abeta aggregation inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
Amyloid fibrils associated with Alzheimer's disease and a wide range of other neurodegenerative diseases have a cross beta-sheet structure, where main chain hydrogen bonding occurs between beta-strands in the direction of the fibril axis. The surface of the beta-sheet has pronounced ridges and grooves when the individual beta-strands have a parallel orientation and the amino acids are in-register with one another. Here we show that in Abeta amyloid fibrils, Met35 packs against Gly33 in the C-terminus of Abeta40 and against Gly37 in the C-terminus of Abeta42. These packing interactions suggest that the protofilament subunits are displaced relative to one another in the Abeta40 and Abeta42 fibril structures. We take advantage of this corrugated structure to design a new class of inhibitors that prevent fibril formation by placing alternating glycine and aromatic residues on one face of a beta-strand. We show that peptide inhibitors based on a GxFxGxF framework disrupt sheet-to-sheet packing and inhibit the formation of mature Abeta fibrils as assayed by thioflavin T fluorescence, electron microscopy, and solid-state NMR spectroscopy. The alternating large and small amino acids in the GxFxGxF sequence are complementary to the corresponding amino acids in the IxGxMxG motif found in the C-terminal sequence of Abeta40 and Abeta42. Importantly, the designed peptide inhibitors significantly reduce the toxicity induced by Abeta42 on cultured rat cortical neurons.  相似文献   

6.
In a recent model of beta-amyloid (Abeta) fibrils, based mainly on solid-state NMR data, a molecular layer consists of two beta-sheets (residues 12-23 and 31-40 of Abeta1-40), folded onto one another by a connecting "bend" structure (residues 25-29) in the side-chain dimension. In this paper, we use two N-methyl amino acids to disrupt each of the two beta-sheets individually (2NMe(NTerm), residues 17 and 19; and 2NMe(CTerm), residues 37 and 39), or both of them at the same time (4NMe, with the above four N-methylated residues). Our data indicate that incorporation of two N-methyl amino acids into one beta-sheet is sufficient to disrupt that sheet while leaving the other, unmodified beta-sheet intact and able to form fibrils. We show, however, that disruption of each of the two beta-sheets has strikingly different effects on fibrillogenesis kinetics and fibril morphology. Both 2NMe(NTerm) and 2NMe(CTerm) form fibrils at similar rates, but more slowly than that of unmodified Abeta1-40. Electron microscopy shows that 2NMe(NTerm) forms straight fibrils with fuzzy amorphous material coating the edges, while 2NMe(CTerm) forms very regular, highly twisted fibrils-in both cases, distinct from the morphology of Abeta1-40 fibrils. Both 2NMe peptides show a "CMC" approximately four times greater than that of Abeta1-40. CD spectra of these peptides also evolve differently in time: whereas the CD spectra of 2NMe(NTerm) evolve little over 10 days, those of 2NMe(CTerm) show a transition to high beta-sheet content at about day 4-5. We also show that disruption of both beta-sheet domains, as in 4NMe, prevents fibril formation altogether, and renders Abeta1-40 highly water soluble and monomeric, and with solvent-exposed side chains. In summary, our data show (1) that the two beta-sheet domains fold in a semiautonomous manner, since disrupting each one still allows the other to fold; (2) that disruption of the N-terminal beta-sheet has a more profound effect on fibrillogenesis than disruption of the C-terminal beta-sheet, suggesting that the former is the more critical for the overall structure of the fibril; and (3) that disruption of both beta-sheet domains renders the peptide monomeric and unable to form fibrils.  相似文献   

7.
Amyloid fibrils are self-associating filamentous structures, the deposition of which is considered to be one of the most important factors in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease and various other disorders. Here we used single molecule manipulation methods to explore the mechanics and structural dynamics of amyloid fibrils. In mechanically manipulated amyloid fibrils, formed from either amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides 1-40 or 25-35, beta-sheets behave as elastic structures that can be "unzipped" from the fibril with constant forces. The unzipping forces were different for Abeta1-40 and Abeta25-35. Unzipping was fully reversible across a wide range of stretch rates provided that coupling, via the beta-sheet, between bound and dissociated states was maintained. The rapid, cooperative zipping together of beta-sheets could be an important mechanism behind the self-assembly of amyloid fibrils. The repetitive force patterns contribute to a mechanical fingerprint that could be utilized in the characterization of different amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

8.
Apolipoprotein (apo) E is a well characterized lipid-binding protein in plasma that also exists as a common nonfibrillar component of both cerebral and systemic amyloid deposits. A genetic link between a common isoform of apoE, apoE4, and the incidence of late onset Alzheimer disease has drawn considerable attention to the potential roles of apoE in amyloid-related disease. We examined the interactions of apoE with amyloid fibrils composed of apoC-II and the amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide. Aggregates of apoE with Abeta and apoC-II are found in Alzheimer and atherosclerotic plaques, respectively. Sedimentation velocity and fibril size distribution analysis showed that apoE3 and E4 isoforms bind and noncovalently cross-link apoC-II fibrils in a similar manner. This ability to cross-link apoC-II fibrils was abolished by the dissociation of the apoE tetramer to monomers or by thrombin cleavage to yield separate N- and C-terminal domains. Preparative ultracentrifuge binding studies indicated that apoE and the isolated N- and C-terminal domains of apoE bind with submicromolar affinities to both apoC-II and Abeta fibrils. Fluorescence quenching and resonance energy transfer experiments confirmed that both domains of apoE interact with apoC-II fibrils and demonstrated that the binding of the isolated N-terminal domain of apoE to apoC-II or Abeta fibrils is accompanied by a significant conformational change with helix three of the domain moving relative to helix one. We propose a model involving the interaction of apoE with patterns of aligned residues that could explain the general ability of apoE to bind to a diverse range of amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

9.
Phase diagrams describing fibrillization by polyalanine peptides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

10.
Although the gross morphology of amyloid fibrils is fairly well understood, very little is known about how the constituent polypeptides fold within the amyloid folding motif. In the experiments reported here, we used trypsin and chymotrypsin to conduct limited proteolysis studies on synthetic amyloid fibrils composed of the Alzheimer's disease peptide Abeta(1-40). In both reactions, the extreme N-terminal proteolytic fragment is released from fibrils as rapidly as it is from the Abeta monomer, while other proteolytic fragments are generated much more slowly. Furthermore, aggregated material isolated by centrifugation of intermediate digestion time points from both proteases contains, in addition to full-length material, peptides that possess mature C-termini but truncated N-termini. These data strongly suggest that the N-terminal region of Abeta is not involved in the beta-sheet network of the amyloid fibril, while the C-terminus is essentially completely engaged in protective-presumably beta-sheet-structure. In both digests, release of the extreme N-terminal fragments of Abeta(1-40) reaches plateau values corresponding to about 80% of the total available Abeta. This suggests that there are two classes of peptides in the fibril: while the majority of Abeta molecules have an exposed N-terminus, about 20% of the peptides have an N-terminus that is protected from proteolysis within the fibril structure. The most likely cause of this heterogeneity is the lateral association of protofilaments into the fibril structure, which would be expected to generate a unique environment for those Abeta N-termini located at protofilament packing interfaces and/or in the interior core region between the packed protofilaments. This suggests that the N-terminal region of Abeta, while not directly involved in the beta-sheet network of the fibril, may contribute to fibril stability by participating in protofilament packing.  相似文献   

11.
Polymerization of the amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide into protease-resistant fibrils is a significant step in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. It has not been possible to obtain detailed structural information about this process with conventional techniques because the peptide has limited solubility and does not form crystals. In this work, we present experimental results leading to a molecular level model for fibril formation. Systematically selected Abeta-fragments containing the Abeta16-20 sequence, previously shown essential for Abeta-Abeta binding, were incubated in a physiological buffer. Electron microscopy revealed that the shortest fibril-forming sequence was Abeta14-23. Substitutions in this decapeptide impaired fibril formation and deletion of the decapeptide from Abeta1-42 inhibited fibril formation completely. All studied peptides that formed fibrils also formed stable dimers and/or tetramers. Molecular modeling of Abeta14-23 oligomers in an antiparallel beta-sheet conformation displayed favorable hydrophobic interactions stabilized by salt bridges between all charged residues. We propose that this decapeptide sequence forms the core of Abeta-fibrils, with the hydrophobic C terminus folding over this core. The identification of this fundamental sequence and the implied molecular model could facilitate the design of potential inhibitors of amyloidogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Filamentous amyloid aggregates are central to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease. We use all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with explicit solvent and multiple force fields to probe the structural stability and the conformational dynamics of several models of Alzheimer's beta-amyloid fibril structures, for both wild-type and mutated amino acid sequences. The structural models are based on recent solid state NMR data. In these models, the peptides form in-register parallel beta-sheets along the fibril axis, with dimers of two U-shaped peptides located in layers normal to the fibril axis. Four different topologies are explored for stacking the beta-strand regions against each other to form a hydrophobic core. Our MD results suggest that all four NMR-based models are structurally stable, and we find good agreement with dihedral angles estimated from solid-state NMR experiments. Asp23 and Lys28 form buried salt-bridges, resulting in an alternating arrangement of the negatively and positively charged residues along the fibril axis that is reminiscent of a one-dimensional ionic crystal. Interior water molecules are solvating the buried salt-bridges. Based on data from NMR measurements and MD simulations of short amyloid fibrils, we constructed structural models of long fibrils. Calculated X-ray fiber diffraction patterns show the characteristics of packed beta-sheets seen in experiments, and suggest new experiments that could discriminate between various fibril topologies.  相似文献   

13.
Antzutkin ON  Leapman RD  Balbach JJ  Tycko R 《Biochemistry》2002,41(51):15436-15450
We describe electron microscopy (EM), scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on amyloid fibrils formed by the 42-residue beta-amyloid peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease (Abeta(1)(-)(42)) and by residues 10-35 of the full-length peptide (Abeta(10)(-)(35)). These measurements place constraints on the supramolecular structure of the amyloid fibrils, especially the type of beta-sheets present in the characteristic amyloid cross-beta structural motif and the assembly of these beta-sheets into a fibril. EM images of negatively stained Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils and measurements of fibril mass per length (MPL) by STEM show a strong dependence of fibril morphology and MPL on pH. Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils formed at pH 3.7 are single "protofilaments" with MPL equal to twice the value expected for a single cross-beta layer. Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils formed at pH 7.4 are apparently pairs of protofilaments or higher order bundles. EM and STEM data for Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils indicate that protofilaments with MPL equal to twice the value expected for a single cross-beta layer are also formed by Abeta(1)(-)(42) and that these protofilaments exist singly and in pairs at pH 7.4. Solid-state NMR measurements of intermolecular distances in Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils, using multiple-quantum (13)C NMR, (13)C-(13)C dipolar recoupling, and (15)N-(13)C dipolar recoupling techniques, support the in-register parallel beta-sheet organization previously established by Lynn, Meredith, Botto, and co-workers [Benzinger et al. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 13407-13412; Benzinger et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 3491-3499] and show that this beta-sheet organization is present at pH 3.7 as well as pH 7.4 despite the differences in fibril morphology and MPL. Solid-state NMR measurements of intermolecular distances in Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils, which represent the first NMR data on Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils, also indicate an in-register parallel beta-sheet organization. These results, along with previously reported data on Abeta(1)(-)(40) fibrils, suggest that the supramolecular structures of Abeta(10)(-)(35), Abeta(1)(-)(40), and Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils are quite similar. A schematic structural model of these fibrils, consistent with known experimental EM, STEM, and solid-state NMR data, is presented.  相似文献   

14.
Amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) assembly into toxic oligomeric and fibrillar structures is a seminal event in Alzheimer's disease, therefore blocking this process could have significant therapeutic benefit. A rigorous mechanistic understanding of Abeta assembly would facilitate the targeting and design of fibrillogenesis inhibitors. Prior studies have shown that Abeta fibrillogenesis involves conformational changes leading to the formation of extended beta-sheets and that an alpha-helix-containing intermediate may be involved. However, the significance of this intermediate has been a matter of debate. We report here that the formation of an oligomeric, alpha-helix-containing assembly is a key step in Abeta fibrillogenesis. The generality of this phenomenon was supported by conformational studies of 18 different Abeta peptides, including wild-type Abeta(1-40) and Abeta(1-42), biologically relevant truncated and chemically modified Abeta peptides, and Abeta peptides causing familial forms of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Without exception, fibrillogenesis of these peptides involved an oligomeric alpha-helix-containing intermediate and the kinetics of formation of the intermediate and of fibrils was temporally correlated. The kinetics varied depending on amino acid sequence and the extent of peptide N- and C-terminal truncation. The pH dependence of helix formation suggested that Asp and His exerted significant control over this process and over fibrillogenesis in general. Consistent with this idea, Abeta peptides containing Asp-->Asn or His-->Gln substitutions showed altered fibrillogenesis kinetics. These data emphasize the importance of the dynamic interplay between Abeta monomer conformation and oligomerization state in controlling fibrillogenesis kinetics.  相似文献   

15.
The 16-22 amino-acid fragment of the beta-amyloid peptide associated with the Alzheimer's disease, Abeta, is capable of forming amyloid fibrils. Here we study the aggregation mechanism of Abeta16-22 peptides by unbiased thermodynamic simulations at the atomic level for systems of one, three, and six Abeta16-22 peptides. We find that the isolated Abeta16-22 peptide is mainly a random coil in the sense that both the alpha-helix and beta-strand contents are low, whereas the three- and six-chain systems form aggregated structures with a high beta-sheet content. Furthermore, in agreement with experiments on Abeta16-22 fibrils, we find that large parallel beta-sheets are unlikely to form. For the six-chain system, the aggregated structures can have many different shapes, but certain particularly stable shapes can be identified.  相似文献   

16.
Zheng J  Jang H  Nussinov R 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2497-2509
Beta2-microglobulin (beta2-m) can form dialysis-related amyloid deposits. The structure of a fragment of beta2-m (K3, Ser20-Lys41) in the oligomeric state has recently been solved. We modeled equilibrium structures of K3 oligomers with different organizations (single and double layers) and morphologies (linear-like and annular-like) for the wild-type and mutants using all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We focused on the sheet-to-sheet association force, which is the key in the amyloid organization and morphology. For the linear-like morphology, we observed two stable organizations: (i) single-layered parallel-stranded beta-sheets and (ii) double-layered parallel-stranded antiparallel beta-sheets stacked perpendicular to the fibril axis through the hydrophobic N-terminal-N-terminal (NN) interface. No stable annular structures were observed. The structural instability of the annular morphology was mainly attributed to electrostatic repulsion of three negatively charged residues (Asp15, Glu17, and Asp19) projecting from the same beta-strand surface. Linear-like and annular-like double-layered oligomers with the NN interface are energetically more favorable than other oligomers with C-terminal-C-terminal (CC) or C-terminal-N-terminal (CN) interfaces, emphasizing the importance of hydrophobic interactions and side-chain packing in stabilizing these oligomers. Moreover, only linear-like structures, rather than annular structures, with parallel beta-strands and antiparallel beta-sheet arrangements are possible intermediate states for the K3 beta2-m amyloid fibrils in solution. Comparing the beta2-m fragment with Abeta indicates that while both adopt similar beta-strand-turn-beta-strand motifs, the final amyloid structures can be dramatically different in size, structure, and morphology due to differences in side-chain packing arrangements, intermolecular driving forces, sequence composition, and residue positions, suggesting that the mechanism leading to distinct morphologies and the aggregation pathways is sequence specific.  相似文献   

17.
Deposition of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) into amyloid plaques is one of the invariant neuropathological features of Alzheimer's disease. Proteins that codeposit with Abeta are potentially important for the pathogenesis, and a recently discovered plaque-associated protein is the collagenous Alzheimer amyloid plaque component (CLAC). In this study, we investigated the molecular interactions between Abeta aggregates and CLAC using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and a solid-phase binding immunoassay. We found that CLAC binds to Abeta with high affinity, that the central region of Abeta is necessary and sufficient for CLAC interaction, and that the aggregation state of Abeta as well as the presence of negatively charged residues is important. We also show that this binding results in a reduced rate of fibril elongation. Taken together, we suggest that CLAC becomes involved at an intermediate stage in the pathogenesis by binding to Abeta fibrils, including fibrils formed from peptides with truncated N- or C-termini, and thereby slows their growth.  相似文献   

18.
Amyloid fibril formation is a phenomenon common to many proteins and peptides, including amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. To clarify the mechanism of fibril formation and to create inhibitors, real-time monitoring of fibril growth is essential. Here, seed-dependent amyloid fibril growth of Abeta(1-40) was visualized in real-time at the single fibril level using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM) combined with the binding of thioflavin T, an amyloid-specific fluorescence dye. The clear image and remarkable length of the fibrils enabled an exact analysis of the rate of growth of individual fibrils, indicating that the fibril growth was a highly cooperative process extending the fibril ends at a constant rate. It has been known that Abeta amyloid formation is a stereospecific reaction and the stability is affected by l/d-amino acid replacement. Focusing on these aspects, we designed several analogues of Abeta(25-35), a cytotoxic fragment of Abeta(1-40), consisting of l and d-amino acid residues, and examined their inhibitory effects by TIRFM. Some chimeric Abeta(25-35) peptides inhibited the fibril growth of Abeta(25-35) strongly, although they could not inhibit the growth of Abeta(1-40). The results suggest that a more rational design of stereospecific inhibitors, combined with real-time monitoring of fibril growth, will be useful to invent a potent inhibitor preventing the amyloid fibril growth of Abeta(1-40) and other proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Petkova AT  Yau WM  Tycko R 《Biochemistry》2006,45(2):498-512
We describe solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on fibrils formed by the 40-residue beta-amyloid peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease (Abeta(1-40)) that place constraints on the identity and symmetry of contacts between in-register, parallel beta-sheets in the fibrils. We refer to these contacts as internal and external quaternary contacts, depending on whether they are within a single molecular layer or between molecular layers. The data include (1) two-dimensional 13C-13C NMR spectra that indicate internal quaternary contacts between side chains of L17 and F19 and side chains of I32, L34, and V36, as well as external quaternary contacts between side chains of I31 and G37; (2) two-dimensional 15N-13C NMR spectra that indicate external quaternary contacts between the side chain of M35 and the peptide backbone at G33; (3) measurements of magnetic dipole-dipole couplings between the side chain carboxylate group of D23 and the side chain amine group of K28 that indicate salt bridge interactions. Isotopic dilution experiments allow us to make distinctions between intramolecular and intermolecular contacts. On the basis of these data and previously determined structural constraints from solid-state NMR and electron microscopy, we construct full molecular models using restrained molecular dynamics simulations and restrained energy minimization. These models apply to Abeta(1-40) fibrils grown with gentle agitation. We also present evidence for different internal quaternary contacts in Abeta(1-40) fibrils grown without agitation, which are morphologically distinct.  相似文献   

20.
Aggregation and fibril formation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides Abeta40 and Abeta42 are central events in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease. Previous studies have established the ratio of Abeta40 to Abeta42 as an important factor in determining the fibrillogenesis, toxicity, and pathological distribution of Abeta. To better understand the molecular basis underlying the pathologic consequences associated with alterations in the ratio of Abeta40 to Abeta42, we probed the concentration- and ratio-dependent interactions between well defined states of the two peptides at different stages of aggregation along the amyloid formation pathway. We report that monomeric Abeta40 alters the kinetic stability, solubility, and morphological properties of Abeta42 aggregates and prevents their conversion into mature fibrils. Abeta40, at approximately equimolar ratios (Abeta40/Abeta42 approximately 0.5-1), inhibits (> 50%) fibril formation by monomeric Abeta42, whereas inhibition of protofibrillar Abeta42 fibrillogenesis is achieved at lower, substoichiometric ratios (Abeta40/Abeta42 approximately 0.1). The inhibitory effect of Abeta40 on Abeta42 fibrillogenesis is reversed by the introduction of excess Abeta42 monomer. Additionally, monomeric Abeta42 and Abeta40 are constantly recycled and compete for binding to the ends of protofibrillar and fibrillar Abeta aggregates. Whereas the fibrillogenesis of both monomeric species can be seeded by fibrils composed of either peptide, Abeta42 protofibrils selectively seed the fibrillogenesis of monomeric Abeta42 but not monomeric Abeta40. Finally, we also show that the amyloidogenic propensities of different individual and mixed Abeta species correlates with their relative neuronal toxicities. These findings, which highlight specific points in the amyloid peptide equilibrium that are highly sensitive to the ratio of Abeta40 to Abeta42, carry important implications for the pathogenesis and current therapeutic strategies of Alzheimer disease.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号