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1.
2.
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   

3.
Amyloid fibrils are proteinous aggregates associated with various diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, type II diabetes, and dialysis-related amyloidosis. It is generally thought that, during the progression of these diseases, a precursor peptide or protein assumes a partially denatured structure, which interacts with the fibril seed to change into the final amyloid form. β2-Microglobulin (β2m), associated with dialysis-related amyloidosis, is known to form amyloid fibrils at low pH via a partially structured state. However, the molecular mechanism by which the conformation of β2m changes from the precursor to the final fibril structure is poorly understood. We performed various NMR experiments to characterize acid-denatured β2m. The analysis of the transverse relaxation rates revealed that acid-denatured β2m undergoes a structural exchange with an extensively unfolded form. The results of transferred cross-saturation experiments indicated that residues with a residual structure in the acid-denatured state are associated with the interaction with the fibril seed. Our experimental data suggest the partially structured state to be "activated" to become extensively unfolded, in which state the hydrophobic residues are exposed and associate with the seed. Our results provide general information about the extension of amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

4.
Plasma apolipoproteins show alpha-helical structure in the lipid-bound state and limited conformational stability in the absence of lipid. This structural instability of lipid-free apolipoproteins may account for the high propensity of apolipoproteins to aggregate and accumulate in disease-related amyloid deposits. Here, we explore the properties of amyloid fibrils formed by apolipoproteins using human apolipoprotein (apo) C-II as a model system. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange and NMR spectroscopy of apoC-II fibrils revealed core regions between residues 19-37 and 57-74 with reduced amide proton exchange rates compared to monomeric apoC-II. The C-terminal core region was also identified by partial proteolysis of apoC-II amyloid fibrils using endoproteinase GluC and proteinase K. Complete tryptic hydrolysis of apoC-II fibrils followed by centrifugation yielded a single peptide in the pellet fraction identified using mass spectrometry as apoC-II(56-76). Synthetic apoC-II(56-76) readily formed fibrils, albeit with a different morphology and thioflavinT fluorescence yield compared to full-length apoC-II. Studies with smaller peptides narrowed this fibril-forming core to a region within residues 60-70. We postulate that the ability of apoC-II(60-70) to independently form amyloid fibrils drives fibril formation by apoC-II. These specific amyloid-forming regions within apolipoproteins may underlie the propensity of apolipoproteins and their peptide derivatives to accumulate in amyloid deposits in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Recent progress in the field of amyloid research indicates that the classical view of amyloid fibrils, being irreversibly formed highly stable structures resistant to perturbating conditions and proteolytic digestion, is getting more complex. We studied the thermal stability and heat-induced depolymerization of amyloid fibrils of β(2)-microglobulin (β2m), a protein responsible for dialysis-related amyloidosis. We found that freshly polymerized β2m fibrils at 0.1-0.3 mg/mL concentration completely dissociated to monomers upon 10 min incubation at 99 °C. Fibril depolymerization was followed by thioflavin-T fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy at various temperatures. Dissociation of β2m fibrils was found to be a reversible and dynamic process reaching equilibrium between fibrils and monomers within minutes. Repolymerization experiments revealed that the number of extendable fibril ends increased significantly upon incubation at elevated temperatures suggesting that the mechanism of fibril unfolding involves two distinct processes: (1) dissociation of monomers from the fibril ends and (2) the breakage of fibrils. The breakage of fibrils may be an important in vivo factor multiplying the number of fibril nuclei and thus affecting the onset and progress of disease. We investigated the effects of some additives and different factors on the stability of amyloid fibrils. Sample aging increased the thermal stability of β2m fibril solution. 0.5 mM SDS completely prevented β2m fibrils from dissociation up to the applied highest temperature of 99 °C. The generality of our findings was proved on fibrils of K3 peptide and α-synuclein. Our simple method may also be beneficial for screening and developing amyloid-active compounds for therapeutic purposes.  相似文献   

7.
We develop a theory for three states of equilibrium of amyloid peptides: the monomer, oligomer, and fibril. We assume that the oligomeric state is a disordered micellelike collection of a few peptide chains held together loosely by hydrophobic interactions into a spherical hydrophobic core. We assume that fibrillar amyloid chains are aligned and further stabilized by steric zipper interactions—hydrogen bonding, steric packing, and specific hydrophobic side-chain contacts. The model makes a broad set of predictions that are consistent with experimental results: 1), Similar to surfactant micellization, amyloid oligomerization should increase with peptide concentration in solution. 2), The onset of fibrillization limits the concentration of oligomers in the solution. 3), The extent of Aβ fibrillization increases with peptide concentration. 4), The predicted average fibril length versus monomer concentration agrees with data on α-synuclein. 5), Full fibril length distributions agree with data on α-synuclein. 6), Denaturants should melt out fibrils. And finally, 7), added salt should stabilize fibrils by reducing repulsions between amyloid peptide chains. It is of interest that small changes in solvent conditions can tip the equilibrium balance between oligomer and fibril and cause large changes in rates through effects on the transition-state barrier. This model may provide useful insights into the physical processes underlying amyloid diseases.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: The serine protease inhibitor α1-antichymotrypsin (ACT) consistently colocalizes with amyloid deposits of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and may contribute to the generation of amyloid proteins and/or physically affect fibril assembly. AD amyloid fibrils are composed primarily of Aβ, which is a proteolytic fragment of the larger β-amyloid precursor protein. Using negative-stain and immunochemical electron microscopy, we have investigated the binding of ACT to the fibrils formed by four synthetic Aβ analogues corresponding to the wild-type human 1–40 sequence [HWt(1–40)], a 1–40 peptide [HDu(1–40)] containing the Glu22→ Gln mutation found in hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis of the Dutch type, the N-terminal 1–28 residues [β(1–28)], and an internal fragment of Aβ containing residues 11–28 [β(11–28)]. Each of these peptide analogues assembled into 70–90-Å-diameter fibrils resembling native amyloid and, except for β(11–28), bound ACT, as indicated by the appearance of 80–100-Å globular particles that adhered to preformed fibrils and that could be decorated with anti-ACT antibodies. Under the conditions used, ACT binding destabilized the in vitro fibrils and produced a gradual dissolution of the macromolecular assemblies into constituent filaments and shorter fragments. The internal fragment (11–28) did not exhibit ACT binding or any structural changes. These results suggest that a specific sequence likely contained within the N-terminal 10 residues of Aβ is responsible for the formation of the ACT-amyloid complex. Although the observed fibril disassembly is surprising in view of the notion that ACT contributes directly to the physical process involved in amyloid fibril formation, the induced structural changes may expose new domains in Aβ for additional proteolysis or for interactions with cell-surface receptors.  相似文献   

9.
Amyloid fibrils characterize a diverse group of human diseases that includes Alzheimer's disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob and type II diabetes. Alzheimer's amyloid fibrils consist of amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide and occur in a range of structurally different fibril morphologies. The structural characteristics of 12 single Aβ(1-40) amyloid fibrils, all formed under the same solution conditions, were determined by electron cryo-microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction. The majority of analyzed fibrils form a range of morphologies that show almost continuously altering structural properties. The observed fibril polymorphism implies that amyloid formation can lead, for the same polypeptide sequence, to many different patterns of inter- or intra-residue interactions. This property differs significantly from native, monomeric protein folding reactions that produce, for one protein sequence, only one ordered conformation and only one set of inter-residue interactions.  相似文献   

10.
The 29-residue peptide hormone glucagon forms amyloid fibrils within a few hours at low pH. In this study, we use glucagon as a model system to investigate fibril formation by liquid-state 1H-NMR spectroscopy One-dimensional, correlation, and diffusion experiments monitoring the fibril formation process provide insight into the early stages of the pathway on which the molecules aggregate to fibrils. In conjunction with these techniques, exchange experiments give information about the end-state conformation. Within the limits of detection, there are no signs of larger oligomeric intermediates in the course of the fibril formation process. Kinetic information is extracted from the time course of the residual free glucagon signal decay. This suggests that glucagon amyloids form by a nucleated growth mechanism in which trimers (rather than monomers) of glucagon interact directly with the growing fibrils rather than with each other. The results of proton/deuterium exchange experiments on mature fibrils with subsequent dissolution show that the N-terminal of glucagon is the least amenable to exchange, which indicates that this part is strongly involved in the intermolecular bonds of the fibrils.  相似文献   

11.
Protein aggregation and amyloid formation are associated with both pathological conditions in humans such as Alzheimer's disease and native functions such as peptide hormone storage in the pituitary secretory granules in mammals. Here, we studied amyloid fibrils formation by three neuropeptides namely physalaemin, kassinin and substance P of tachykinin family using biophysical techniques including circular dichroism, thioflavin T, congo red binding and microscopy. All these neuropeptides under study have significant sequence similarity with Aβ(25-35) that is known to form neurotoxic amyloids. We found that all these peptides formed amyloid-like fibrils in vitro in the presence of heparin, and these amyloids were found to be nontoxic in neuronal cells. However, the extent of amyloid formation, structural transition, and morphology were different depending on the primary sequences of peptide. When Aβ(25-35) and Aβ40 were incubated with each of these neuropeptides in 1:1 ratio, a drastic increase in amyloid growths were observed compared to that of individual peptides suggesting that co-aggregation of Aβ and these neuropeptides. The electron micrographs of these co-aggregates were dissimilar when compared with individual peptide fibrils further supporting the possible incorporation of these neuropeptides in Aβ amyloid fibrils. Further, the fibrils of these neuropeptides can seed the fibrils formation of Aβ40 and reduced the toxicity of preformed Aβ fibrils. The present study of amyloid formation by tachykinin neuropeptides is not only providing an understanding of the mechanism of amyloid fibril formation in general, but also offering plausible explanation that why these neuropeptide might reduce the cytotoxicity associated with Alzheimer's disease related amyloids.  相似文献   

12.
Fibril formation is the hallmark of pathogenesis in Alzheimer's disease and other amyloid disorders caused by conformational alterations leading to the aggregation of soluble monomers. Aβ40 self‐associates to form amyloid fibrils. Its central seven‐residue segment KLVFFAE (Aβ16–22), which is thought to be crucial for fibril formation of the full‐length peptide, forms fibrils even in isolation. Context‐dependent induction of amyloid formation by such sequences in peptides, which otherwise do not have that propensity, is of considerable interest. We have examined the effect of introducing the Aβ16–22 sequence at the N‐terminus of two amphipathic helical 18‐residue peptides Ac‐WYSEMKRNVQRLERAIEE‐am and Ac‐KQLIRFLKRLDRNLWGLA‐am, which have high average hydrophobic moment <μH> values but have net charges of 0 and +4, respectively, at neutral pH. Upon incubation in aqueous buffer, fibril‐like aggregates were discernible by transmission electron microscopy for the peptide with only 0 net charge, which also displayed ThT binding and β‐structure. Although both the sequences have been derived from amphipathic helical segments in globular proteins and possess high average hydrophobic moments, the +4 charge peptide lacks the ability to form fibrils, while the peptide with 0 charge has the tendency to form fibrillar structures. Variation in the net charge and the presence of several glutamic acids in the sequence of the peptide with net charge 0 appear to favor the formation of fibrils when the Aβ16–22 sequence is attached at the N‐terminus. Copyright © 2011 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Amyloid fibrils are ordered polymers in which constituent polypeptides adopt a non-native fold. Despite their importance in degenerative human diseases, the overall structure of amyloid fibrils remains unknown. High-resolution studies of model peptide assemblies have identified residues forming cross-β-strands and have revealed some details of local β-strand packing. However, little is known about the assembly contacts that define the fibril architecture. Here we present a set of three-dimensional structures of amyloid fibrils formed from full-length β2-microglobulin, a 99-residue protein involved in clinical amyloidosis. Our cryo-electron microscopy maps reveal a hierarchical fibril structure built from tetrameric units of globular density, with at least three different subunit interfaces in this homopolymeric assembly. These findings suggest a more complex superstructure for amyloid than hitherto suspected and prompt a re-evaluation of the defining features of the amyloid fold.  相似文献   

14.
Formation of senile plaques containing amyloid fibrils of Aβ (amyloid β-peptide) is a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. Unlike globular proteins, which fold into unique structures, the fibrils of Aβ and other amyloid proteins often contain multiple polymorphs. Polymorphism of amyloid fibrils leads to different toxicity in amyloid diseases and may be the basis for prion strains, but the structural origin for fibril polymorphism is still elusive. In the present study we investigate the structural origin of two major fibril polymorphs of Aβ40: an untwisted polymorph formed under agitated conditions and a twisted polymorph formed under quiescent conditions. Using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, we studied the inter-strand side-chain interactions at 14 spin-labelled positions in the Aβ40 sequence. The results of the present study show that the agitated fibrils have stronger inter-strand spin-spin interactions at most of the residue positions investigated. The two hydrophobic regions at residues 17-20 and 31-36 have the strongest interactions in agitated fibrils. Distance estimates on the basis of the spin exchange frequencies suggest that inter-strand distances at residues 17, 20, 32, 34 and 36?in agitated fibrils are approximately 0.2?? (1??=0.1?nm) closer than in quiescent fibrils. We propose that the strength of inter-strand side-chain interactions determines the degree of β-sheet twist, which then leads to the different association patterns between different cross β-units and thus distinct fibril morphologies. Therefore the inter-strand side-chain interaction may be a structural origin for fibril polymorphism in Aβ and other amyloid proteins.  相似文献   

15.
16.
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 β-sheet structure, and subsequently, was further refined for Aβ(1-40) to be cross β-sheet with double layered in register parallel β-sheet structure by using solid state NMR spectroscopy. On the other hand, anti-parallel β-sheet structure has been reported to short fragments of Aβ-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   

17.
Amyloid fibrils are self-associating filamentous structures deposited in extracellular tissue in various neurodegenerative and protein misfolding disorders. It has been shown that beta-sheet-breaker (BSB) peptides may interfere with amyloid fibril assembly. Although BSB peptides are prospective therapeutic agents in amyloidosis, there is ambiguity about the mechanisms and generality of their action. In the present work we analyzed the effect of the BSB peptide LPFFD on the growth kinetics, morphologic, and mechanical properties of amyloid β25-35 (Aβ25-35) fibrils assembled in an oriented array on mica surface. Aβ25-35 is thought to represent the biologically active, toxic fragment of the full-length Aβ peptide. Growth kinetics and morphologic features were analyzed using in situ atomic force microscopy in the presence of various concentrations of LPFFD. We found that the addition of LPFFD only slightly altered the assembly kinetics of Aβ25-35 fibrils. Already formed fibrils did not disassemble in the presence of high concentrations of LPFFD. The mechanical stability of the fibrils was explored with force spectroscopy methods. The nanomechanical behavior of Aβ25-35 fibrils is characterized by the appearance of force staircases which correspond to the force-driven unzipping and dissociation of several protofilaments. In the presence of LPFFD single-plateau force traces dominated. The effects of LPFFD on Aβ25-35 fibril assembly and stability suggest that inter-protofilament interactions were slightly weakened. Complete disassembly of fibrils, however, was not observed. Thus, under the conditions explored here, LPFFD may not be considered as a BSB peptide with generalized beta-sheet breaking properties.  相似文献   

18.
Amyloid immunotherapy has led to the rise of antibodies, which target amyloid fibrils or structural precursors of fibrils, based on their specific conformational properties. Recently, we reported the biotechnological generation of the B10 antibody fragment, which provides conformation-specific binding to amyloid fibrils. B10 strongly interacts with fibrils from Alzheimer's β amyloid (Aβ) peptide, while disaggregated Aβ peptide or Aβ oligomers are not explicitly recognized. B10 also enables poly-amyloid-specific binding and recognizes amyloid fibrils derived from different types of amyloidosis or different polypeptide chains. Based on our current data, however, we find that B10 does not recognize all tested amyloid fibrils and amyloid tissue deposits. It also does not specifically interact with intrinsically unfolded polypeptide chains or globular proteins even if the latter encompass high β-sheet content or β-solenoid domains. By contrast, B10 binds amyloid fibrils from d-amino acid or l-amino acid peptides and non-proteinaceous biopolymers with highly regular and anionic surface properties, such as heparin and DNA. These data establish that B10 binding does not depend on an amyloid-specific or protein-specific backbone structure. Instead, it involves the recognition of a highly regular and anionic surface pattern. This specificity mechanism is conserved in nature and occurs also within a group of natural amyloid receptors from the innate immune system, the pattern recognition receptors. Our data illuminate the structural diversity of naturally occurring amyloid scaffolds and enable the discrimination of distinct fibril populations in vitro and within diseased tissues.  相似文献   

19.
We describe here details of the hydrogen-deuterium (H/D) exchange behavior of the Alzheimer's peptide Abeta(1)(-)(40), while it is a resident in the amyloid fibril, as determined by high-resolution solution NMR. Kinetics of H/D exchange in Abeta(1)(-)(40) fibrils show that about half the backbone amide protons exchange during the first 25 h, while the other half remain unexchanged because of solvent inaccessibility and/or hydrogen-bonded structure. After such a treatment for 25 h with D(2)O, fibrils of (15)N-enriched Abeta were dissolved in a mixture of 95% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and 5% dichloroacetic acid (DCA) and successive heteronuclear (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectra were collected to identify the backbone amides that did not exchange in the fibril. These studies showed that the N and C termini of the peptide are accessible to the solvent in the fibril state and the backbone amides of these residues are readily exchanged with bulk deuterium. In contrast, the residues in the middle of the peptide (residues 16-36) are mostly protected, suggesting that that many of the residues in this segment of the peptide are involved in a beta structure in the fibril. Two residues, G25 and S26, exhibit readily exchangeable backbone amide protons and therefore may be located on a turn or a flexible part of the peptide. Overall, the data substantially supports current models for how the Abeta peptide folds when it engages in the amyloid fibril structure, while also addressing some discrepancies between models.  相似文献   

20.
Alzheimer’s disease is associated with the fibril formation of β-amyloid peptide in extracellular plaque. β-Casein is a milk protein that has shown a remarkable ability to stabilize proteins by inhibiting their protein aggregation and precipitation. The aim of this study was to test in vitro the ability of β-casein to bind the Aβ1–40, change the structure and inhibit the formation of amyloid fibrils in Aβ1–40. Results from the ThT binding assay indicated that incubation of Aβ1–40 with β-casein retarded amyloid fibril formation of Aβ1–40 in a concentration dependent manner such that at a ratio of 1:1 (w:w) led to a significant reduction in the amount of fluorescent intensity. The results from transmission electron microscopy (TEM) also showed that β-casein significantly reduced the number and size of the Aβ1–40 fibrils, suggesting that the chaperone bound to the Aβ1–40 fibrils and/or interacted with the fibrils in some way. ANS results also showed that β-casein significantly decreased the exposed hydrophobic surface in Aβ1–40. Following an ANS binding assay, CD spectroscopy results also showed that incubation of Aβ1–40 resulted in a structural transition to a β-sheet. In the presence of β-casein, however, α-helical conformation was observed which indicated stabilization of the protein. These results reveal the highly efficacious chaperone action of β-casein against amyloid fibril formation of Aβ1–40. These results suggest that in vitro, β-casein binds to the Aβ1–40 fibrils, alters the Aβ1–40 structure and prevents amyloid fibril formation. This approach may result in the identification of a chaperone mechanism for the treatment of neurological diseases.  相似文献   

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