Title of article :
Aβ Monomers Transiently Sample Oligomer and Fibril-Like Configurations: Ensemble Characterization Using a Combined MD/NMR Approach
Author/Authors :
David J. Rosenman، نويسنده , , Christopher R. Connors، نويسنده , , Wen Chen، نويسنده , , Chunyu Wang، نويسنده , , Angel E. Garcia and José N. Onuchic، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Amyloid β (Aβ) peptides are a primary component of fibrils and oligomers implicated in the etiology of Alzheimerʹs disease (AD). However, the intrinsic flexibility of these peptides has frustrated efforts to investigate the secondary and tertiary structure of Aβ monomers, whose conformational landscapes directly contribute to the kinetics and thermodynamics of Aβ aggregation. In this work, de novo replica exchange molecular dynamics (REMD) simulations on the microseconds-per-replica timescale are used to characterize the structural ensembles of Aβ42, Aβ40, and M35-oxidized Aβ42, three physiologically relevant isoforms with substantially different aggregation properties. J-coupling data calculated from the REMD trajectories were compared to corresponding NMR-derived values acquired through two different pulse sequences, revealing that all simulations converge on the order of hundreds of nanoseconds-per-replica toward ensembles that yield good agreement with experiment. Though all three Aβ species adopt highly heterogeneous ensembles, these are considerably more structured compared to simulations on shorter timescales. Prominent in the C-terminus are antiparallel β-hairpins between L17–A21, A30–L36, and V39–I41, similar to oligomer and fibril intrapeptide models that expose these hydrophobic side chains to solvent and may serve as hotspots for self-association. Compared to reduced Aβ42, the absence of a second β-hairpin in Aβ40 and the sampling of alternate β topologies by M35-oxidized Aβ42 may explain the reduced aggregation rates of these forms. A persistent V24–K28 bend motif, observed in all three species, is stabilized by buried backbone to side-chain hydrogen bonds with D23 and a cross-region salt bridge between E22 and K28, highlighting the role of the familial AD-linked E22 and D23 residues in Aβ monomer folding. These characterizations help illustrate the conformational landscapes of Aβ monomers at atomic resolution and provide insight into the early stages of Aβ aggregation pathways.
Keywords :
Molecular dynamics simulations , intrinsically disordered protein , 3JHNHA couplings , residual dipolar couplings , free-energy landscape
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology