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Secondary structure propensity and chirality of the amyloidophilic peptide p5 and its analogues impacts ligand binding - In vitro characterization
Authors:Jonathan S. Wall  Angela Williams  Craig Wooliver  Emily B. Martin  Xiaolin Cheng  R. Eric Heidel  Stephen J. Kennel
Affiliation:1. Departments of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Graduate School of Medicine, Knoxville, TN, USA;2. Departments of Radiology, University of Tennessee, Graduate School of Medicine, Knoxville, TN, USA;3. Center for Molecular Biophysics, Computer Science and Mathematics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA;4. Departments of Surgery, University of Tennessee, Graduate School of Medicine, Knoxville, TN, USA
Abstract:BackgroundPolybasic helical peptides, such as peptide p5, bind human amyloid extracts and synthetic amyloid fibrils. When radiolabeled, peptide p5 has been shown to specifically bind amyloid in vivo thereby allowing imaging of the disease. Structural requirements for heparin and amyloid binding have been studied using analogues of p5 that modify helicity and chirality.MethodsPeptide-ligand interactions were studied using CD spectroscopy and solution-phase binding assays with radiolabeled p5 analogues. The interaction of a subset of peptides was further studied by using molecular dynamics simulations.ResultsDisruption of the peptide helical structure reduced peptide binding to heparin and human amyloid extracts. The all-D enantiomer and the β-sheet-structured peptide bound all substrates as well as, or better than, p5. The interaction of helical and β-sheet structured peptides with Aβ fibrils was modeled and shown to involve both ionic and non-ionic interactions.ConclusionsThe α-helical secondary structure of peptide p5 is important for heparin and amyloid binding; however, helicity is not an absolute requirement as evidenced by the superior reactivity of a β-sheet peptide. The differential binding of the peptides with heparin and amyloid fibrils suggests that these molecular interactions are different. The all-D enantiomer of p5 and the β-sheet peptide are candidates for amyloid targeting reagents in vivo.General SignificanceEfficient binding of polybasic peptides with amyloid is dependent on the linearity of charge spacing in the context of an α-helical secondary structure. Peptides with an α-helix or β-sheet propensity and with similar alignment of basic residues is optimal.
Keywords:Polybasic peptides  Amyloid binding  Heparin  Amino acid spacing  CD  Molecular dynamics
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