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 15 毫秒
1.
Alzheimer's disease is the commonest form of senile dementia, affecting almost 20 million people worldwide. This neurodegenerative disorder is characterized by amyloid deposition in senile plaques, composed primarily of fibrils of an aggregated peptide, beta-amyloid. Fibrillation of beta-amyloid is a nucleation-dependent polymerization process, which is controlled by two kinetics parameters: the nucleation rate and the elongation or growth rate. As the kinetics of fibrillation is strongly dependent on the presence of trace amounts of fibrils, we suggest that the aggregation of beta-amyloid is a model of autocatalytic reaction. A mathematical analysis, permitting quantitative monitoring of the kinetics of fibrillogenesis of beta-amyloid, nucleation, and elongation constants, is presented. The model was checked by applying it to the aggregation of the fragment 1-40 of the beta-amyloid. Understanding of these rate constants may facilitate the study of the effect of substances used for controlling fibril creation and growth. The disaggregating effect of dodecyl trimethylammonium bromide, a cationic surfactant, was easily quantified by means of the model.  相似文献   

2.
We used surface plasmon resonance biosensors to evaluate the kinetics associated with the initial events of beta-amyloid (Abeta) fibril elongation. Fibrils were immobilized on the sensor chip surface and extended by exposure to soluble Abeta(1-40) peptide. The fibril surfaces bound Congo red, a marker for beta sheet structures, and exhibited a slow linear background decay that is consistent with fibril depolymerization. Sonicated fibrils supported elongation better than unsonicated fibrils, which is consistent with fibril extension reactions. The kinetic data revealed that peptide association and dissociation occurred in multiple steps. Kinetic rate constants for fibril extension were determined by globally fitting the response data with a three-step polymerization model. In the first step, the soluble peptide binds to the growing fibril tip in a readily reversible reaction. The subsequent steps likely allow bound peptide to be stabilized into the growing fiber through postbinding transitional events. Using a mutant peptide, F19P Abeta(1-40), we illustrate how the biosensor assay can be used to probe structure/function relationships of fibril elongation.  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.
5.
A number of proteins can aggregate into amyloid-like fibrils. It was noted that fibril elongation has similarities to an enzymatic reaction, where monomers or oligomers would play a role of substrate and nuclei/fibrils would play a role of enzyme. The question is how similar these processes really are. We obtained experimental data on insulin amyloid-like fibril elongation at the conditions where other processes which may impact kinetics of fibril formation are minor and fitted it using Michaelis-Menten equation. The correlation of the fit is very good and repeatable. It speaks in favour of enzyme-like model of fibril elongation. In addition, obtained and values at different conditions may help in better understanding influence of environmental factors on the process of fibril elongation.  相似文献   

6.
A wide variety of human diseases are associated with the formation of highly organized protein aggregates termed amyloid fibrils, whose growth (elongation) is due to the assembly of the basic molecular units (monomers) in a sequential polymerization process. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technology has been proposed as a powerful approach to study in detail the fibril elongation of some amyloidogenic peptides. In particular, the injection of monomers over immobilized fibrils allows to follow in real time, and on a very short time-scale, the kinetics of fibril growth. In the present study we confirmed and extended this application of SPR to Aβ(1-42), hampered till now by the very pronounced aggregation propensity of this peptide, involved in Alzheimer disease. We took advantage of a new synthetic strategy ("depsi-peptide" technique) which allows to obtain reliable seed-free solutions (monomers) as well as fibrils of Aβ(1-42). SPR data were consistent with a "dock-and-lock" mechanism underlying Aβ(1-42) elongation process. The setup of an assay monitoring the elongation kinetics is very useful for investigating potential anti-amyloidogenic compounds. Moreover, the possibility to reliably immobilize both Aβ(1-42) monomers and fibrils allows to measure the binding affinities of putative ligands for these different species. The approach applied here to Aβ(1-42) might well be also applied to the study of other fibrillogenic peptides/proteins or to the study of polymerization reactions in general.  相似文献   

7.
Sani MA  Gehman JD  Separovic F 《FEBS letters》2011,585(5):749-754
While neuronal membranes are proposed to be the primary target of amyloid plaques, the effect of phospholipids on fibril formation kinetics and morphology has not yet been resolved. We report that interaction of various compositions with neuronal mimics promoted different processes of fibril formation: negatively charged surfaces increased the lag time and elongation rate in thioflavin T assays, while brain total lipid extract had an opposite effect compared to that in the absence of lipid. Electron microscopy showed thin and elongated fibrils when the peptide was incubated with anionic lipids, while neutral surfaces promoted coarse and small fibrils. Circular dichroism and thioflavin T assays confirmed an initially unstructured peptide, and measured its transition to an aggregated beta-sheet conformation.  相似文献   

8.
In the search for the molecular mechanism of insulin fibrillation, the kinetics of insulin fibril formation were studied under different conditions using the fluorescent dye thioflavin T (ThT). The effect of insulin concentration, agitation, pH, ionic strength, anions, seeding, and addition of 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid (ANS), urea, TMAO, sucrose, and ThT on the kinetics of fibrillation was investigated. The kinetics of the fibrillation process could be described by the lag time for formation of stable nuclei (nucleation) and the apparent rate constant for the growth of fibrils (elongation). The addition of seeds eliminated the lag phase. An increase in insulin concentration resulted in shorter lag times and faster growth of fibrils. Shorter lag times and faster growth of fibrils were seen at acidic pH versus neutral pH, whereas an increase in ionic strength resulted in shorter lag times and slower growth of fibrils. There was no clear correlation between the rate of fibril elongation and ionic strength. Agitation during fibril formation attenuated the effects of insulin concentration and ionic strength on both lag times and fibril growth. The addition of ANS increased the lag time and decreased the apparent growth rate for insulin fibril formation. The ANS-induced inhibition appears to reflect the formation of amorphous aggregates. The denaturant, urea, decreased the lag time, whereas the stabilizers, trimethylamine N-oxide dihydrate (TMAO) and sucrose, increased the lag times. The results indicated that both nucleation and fibril growth were controlled by hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions. A kinetic model, involving the association of monomeric partially folded intermediates, whose concentration is stimulated by the air-water interface, leading to formation of the critical nucleus and thence fibrils, is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
The polyglutamine diseases are a family of nine proteins where intracellular protein misfolding and amyloid-like fibril formation are intrinsically coupled to disease. Previously, we identified a complex two-step mechanism of fibril formation of pathologically expanded ataxin-3, the causative protein of spinocerebellar ataxia type-3 (Machado-Joseph disease). Strikingly, ataxin-3 lacking a polyglutamine tract also formed fibrils, although this occurred only via a single-step that was homologous to the first step of expanded ataxin-3 fibril formation. Here, we present the first kinetic analysis of a disease-associated polyglutamine repeat protein. We show that ataxin-3 forms amyloid-like fibrils by a nucleation-dependent polymerization mechanism. We kinetically model the nucleating event in ataxin-3 fibrillogenesis to the formation of a monomeric thermodynamic nucleus. Fibril elongation then proceeds by a mechanism of monomer addition. The presence of an expanded polyglutamine tract leads subsequently to rapid inter-fibril association and formation of large, highly stable amyloid-like fibrils. These results enhance our general understanding of polyglutamine fibrillogenesis and highlights the role of non-poly(Q) domains in modulating the kinetics of misfolding in this family.  相似文献   

10.
Using the peptide hormone glucagon and Aβ(1-40) as model systems, we have sought to elucidate the mechanisms by which fibrils grow and multiply. We here present real-time observations of growing fibrils at a single-fibril level. Growing from preformed seeds, glucagon fibrils were able to generate new fibril ends by continuously branching into new fibrils. To our knowledge, this is the first time amyloid fibril branching has been observed in real-time. Glucagon fibrils formed by branching always grew in the forward direction of the parent fibril with a preferred angle of 35-40°. Furthermore, branching never occurred at the tip of the parent fibril. In contrast, in a previous study by some of us, Aβ(1-40) fibrils grew exclusively by elongation of preformed seeds. Fibrillation kinetics in bulk solution were characterized by light scattering. A growth process with branching, or other processes that generate new ends from existing fibrils, should theoretically give rise to different fibrillation kinetics than growth without such a process. We show that the effect of adding seeds should be particularly different in the two cases. Our light-scattering data on glucagon and Aβ(1-40) confirm this theoretical prediction, demonstrating the central role of fibril-dependent nucleation in amyloid fibril growth  相似文献   

11.
We report investigations of the morphology and molecular structure of amyloid fibrils comprised of residues 10-40 of the Alzheimer's beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta(10-40)), prepared under various solution conditions and degrees of agitation. Omission of residues 1-9 from the full-length Alzheimer's beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta(1-40)) did not prevent the peptide from forming amyloid fibrils or eliminate fibril polymorphism. These results are consistent with residues 1-9 being disordered in Abeta(1-40) fibrils, and show that fibril polymorphism is not a consequence of disorder in residues 1-9. Fibril morphology was analyzed by atomic force and electron microscopy, and secondary structure and inter-side-chain proximity were probed using solid-state NMR. Abeta(1-40) fibrils were found to be structurally compatible with Abeta(10-40): Abeta(1-40) fibril fragments were used to seed the growth of Abeta(10-40) fibrils, with propagation of fibril morphology and molecular structure. In addition, comparison of lyophilized and hydrated fibril samples revealed no effect of hydration on molecular structure, indicating that Abeta(10-40) fibrils are unlikely to contain bulk water.  相似文献   

12.
Amyloid fibrils elongate seed dependently, with preformed fibrils providing a template for propagation of amyloidogenic conformation. Most seeding experiments use relatively few seed fibrils in comparison with monomers, resembling steady-state enzyme kinetics. Pre-steady-state kinetics should also be useful for characterizing the elongation process. With β2-microglobulin (β2-m), a protein responsible for dialysis-related amyloidosis, we measured the pre-steady-state kinetics of fibril elongation at pH 2.5, conditions under which the monomer is largely unfolded. β2-m has Trp residues at positions 60 and 95. We used three single Trp mutants and fluorescence spectroscopy to study structural change upon fibril elongation. To focus on conformational change in monomers, we prepared seeds with a mutant without a Trp residue. At a fixed concentration of monomeric β2-m, the apparent rate of fibril elongation increased with an increase in the concentration of seeds and then saturated, suggesting the accumulation of a rate-limiting intermediate. Importantly, saturation occurred at a seed/monomer ratio of around 10, as expressed by the concentration of the monomer. Because the number of monomers constituting the seed fibrils is much larger than 10, the results suggest that the elongation process is limited by “non-active-site binding.” Spectral analysis indicated that, upon this non-active-site binding, both Trp60 and Trp95 are exposed to the solvent, and then only Trp60 is buried upon transition to the fibrils. We propose a new model of fibril elongation in which non-active-site binding plays a major role.  相似文献   

13.
In this communication, we suggest that transferred residual dipolar couplings (trRDCs) can be employed to restrain the structure of peptide inhibitors transiently binding to beta-amyloid fibrils. The effect is based on the spontaneous alignment of amyloid fibrils with the fibril axis parallel to the magnetic field. This alignment is transferred to the transiently binding peptide inhibitor and is reflected in the size of the trRDCs. We find that the peptide inhibitor adopts a beta-sheet conformation with the backbone N-H and C-H dipolar vectors aligned preferentially parallel and perpendicular, respectively, to the fibril axis.  相似文献   

14.
Dialysis-related amyloidosis, which occurs in the patients receiving a long-term hemodialysis with high frequency, accompanies the deposition of amyloid fibrils composed of beta(2)-microglobulin (beta2-m). In vitro, beta2-m forms two kinds of fibrous structures at acidic pH. One is a rigid "mature fibril", and the other is a flexible thin filament often called an "immature fibril". In addition, a 22-residue peptide (K3 peptide) corresponding to Ser20 to Lys41 of intact beta2-m forms rigid amyloid-like fibrils similar to mature fibrils. We compared the core of these three fibrils at single-residue resolution using a recently developed hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange method with the dissolution of fibrils by dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). The exchange time-course of these fibrils showed large deviations from a single exponential curve showing that, because of the supramolecular structures, the same residue exists in different environments from molecule to molecule, even in a single fibril. The exchange profiles revealed that the core of the immature fibril is restricted to a narrow region compared to that of the mature fibril. In contrast, all residues were protected from exchange in the K3 fibril, indicating that a whole region of the peptide is engaged in the beta-sheet network. These results suggest the mechanism of amyloid fibril formation, in which the core beta-sheet formed by a minimal sequence propagates to form a rigid and extensive beta-sheet network.  相似文献   

15.
Many human diseases are associated with amyloid fibril deposition, including type 2 diabetes mellitus where human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) forms fibrils in the pancreas. We report here that engineered, soluble forms of the human Ca(2+)-binding protein nucleobindin 1 (NUCB1) prevent hIAPP fibril formation and disaggregate preexisting hIAPP fibrils. Scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and atomic force microscopy indicate that NUCB1 binds to and stabilizes heterogeneous prefibrillar hIAPP species. The NUCB1-stabilized prefibrillar species were isolated by size-exclusion chromatography and analyzed by STEM, dynamic light scattering, and multi-angle light scattering. The stabilized prefibrillar species show a size range of 2-6 million Da and have other similarities to hIAPP protofibrils, but they do not progress to become mature fibrils. The effects of NUCB1 are absent in the presence of Ca(2+). We postulate that the engineered forms of NUCB1 prevent hIAPP fibril formation by a mechanism where protofibril-like species are "capped" to prevent further fibril assembly and maturation. This mode of action appears to be different from other protein-based inhibitors, suggesting that NUCB1 may offer a new approach to inhibiting amyloid formation and disaggregating amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

16.
Mutations in the polypeptide sequence that forms the core structure of amyloid fibrils are known to impact on fibril assembly and stability but the effect of changes on noncore residues, particularly relating to functionalized fibrils where the fibril core is preserved, has not been systematically examined. In this study, the short peptide sequence TTR(105-115) (also known as TTR1) and the functionalized variants TTR1-RGD and TTR1-RAD are used as a model system to investigate the effect of noncore residues on the kinetics of fibril assembly. The noncore residues in TTR1-RGD and TTR1-RAD influence the rate of fibril assembly in non-seeded samples with the glycine residue at position 15 increasing the rate of aggregation compared to alanine. Mature TTR1-RGD fibrils were also found to fragment more readily, indicating possible differences in mechanical properties. Fragments of each type of fibril are capable of self- and cross-seeding, generating fibrils with a highly similar cross-β core structure. The similar rates of assembly observed for self-seeded samples reflect the similar free energy of elongation calculated for these peptides, while the morphology of cross-seeded fibrils is determined by the properties of the monomeric peptide and its macromolecular arrangement within the protofilaments and fibrils. These findings illustrate that noncore residues impact on fibril formation and fibril properties and demonstrate that the influence of noncore residues should be considered when designing sequences for the production of self-assembling functional fibrillar materials.  相似文献   

17.
RADARADARADARADA (RADA 16-I) is a synthetic amphiphilic peptide designed to self-assemble in a controlled way into fibrils and higher ordered structures depending on pH. In this work, we use various techniques to investigate the state of the peptide dispersed in water under dilute conditions at different pH and in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid or hydrochloric acid. We have identified stable RADA 16-I fibrils at pH 2.0–4.5, which have a length of ~200–400 nm and diameter of 10 nm. The fibrils have the characteristic antiparallel β-sheet structure of amyloid fibrils, as measured by circular dichroism and Fourier transform infrared spectrometry. During incubation at pH 2.0–4.5, the fibrils elongate very slowly via an end-to-end fibril-fibril aggregation mechanism, without changing their diameter, and the kinetics of such aggregation depends on pH and anion type. At pH 2.0, we also observed a substantial amount of monomers in the system, which do not participate in the fibril elongation and degrade to fragments. The fibril-fibril elongation kinetics has been simulated using the Smoluchowski kinetic model, population balance equations, and the simulation results are in good agreement with the experimental data. It is also found that the aggregation process is not limited by diffusion but rather is an activated process with energy barrier in the order of 20 kcal/mol.  相似文献   

18.
A 23-residue peptide termed BH(9-10) was designed based on a beta-hairpin segment of the single-layer beta-sheet region of Borrelia OspA protein. The peptide contains a large number of charged amino acid residues, and it does not follow the amphipathic pattern that is commonly found in natural beta-sheets. In aqueous solution, the peptide was highly soluble and flexible, with a propensity to form a non-native beta-turn. Trifluoroethanol (TFE) stabilized a native-like beta-turn in BH(9-10). TFE also decreased the level of solubility of the peptide, resulting in peptide precipitation. The precipitation process accompanied a conformational conversion to a beta-sheet structure, as judged with circular dichroism spectroscopy. The precipitate was found to be fibrils similar to those associated with human amyloid diseases. The fibrillization kinetics depended on peptide and TFE concentrations, and had a nucleation step followed by an assembly step. The fibrillization was reversible, and the dissociation reaction involved two phases. TFE appears to induce the fibrils by stabilizing a beta-sheet conformation of the peptide that optimally satisfies hydrogen bonding and electrostatic complementarity. This TFE-induced fibrillization is quite unusual, because most amyloidogenic peptides form fibrils in aqueous solution and TFE disrupts these fibrils. Nevertheless, the BH(9-10) fibrils have similar structure to other fibrils, supporting the emerging idea that polypeptides possess an intrinsic ability to form amyloid-like fibrils. The high level of solubility of BH(9-10), the ability to precisely control fibril formation and dissociation, and the high-resolution structure of the same sequence in the beta-hairpin conformation in the OspA protein provide a tractable experimental system for studying the fibril formation mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
beta-(25-35) is a synthetic derivative of beta-amyloid, the peptide that is believed to cause Alzheimer's disease. As it is highly toxic and forms fibrillar aggregates typical of beta-amyloid, it is suitable as a model for testing inhibitors of aggregation and toxicity. We demonstrate that N-methylated derivatives of beta-(25-35), which in isolation are soluble and non-toxic, can prevent the aggregation and inhibit the resulting toxicity of the wild type peptide. N-Methylation can block hydrogen bonding on the outer edge of the assembling amyloid. The peptides are assayed by Congo red and thioflavin T binding, electron microscopy, and a 3-(4, 5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) toxicity assay on PC12 cells. One peptide (Gly(25) N-methylated) has properties similar to the wild type, whereas five have varying effects on prefolded fibrils and fibril assembly. In particular, beta-(25-35) with Gly(33) N-methylated is able to completely prevent fibril assembly and to reduce the toxicity of prefolded amyloid. With Leu(34) N-methylated, the fibril morphology is altered and the toxicity reduced. We suggest that the use of N-methylated derivatives of amyloidogenic peptides and proteins could provide a general solution to the problem of amyloid deposition and toxicity.  相似文献   

20.
The most well-established structural feature of amyloid fibrils is the cross-beta motif, an extended beta-sheet structure formed by beta-strands oriented perpendicular to the long fibril axis. Direct experimental identification of non-beta-strand conformations in amyloid fibrils has not been reported previously. Here we report the results of solid-state NMR measurements on amyloid fibrils formed by the 40-residue beta-amyloid peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease (Abeta(1-40)), prepared synthetically with pairs of (13)C labels at consecutive backbone carbonyl sites. The measurements probe the peptide backbone conformation in residues 24-30, a segment where a non-beta-strand conformation has been suggested by earlier sequence analysis, cross-linking experiments, and molecular modeling. Data obtained with the fpRFDR-CT, DQCSA, and 2D MAS exchange solid-state NMR techniques, which provide independent constraints on the phi and psi backbone torsion angles between the labeled carbonyl sites, indicate non-beta-strand conformations at G25, S26, and G29. These results represent the first site-specific identification and characterization of non-beta-strand peptide conformations in an amyloid fibril.  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