4.6 Article

Multiscale Models for Fibril Formation: Rare Events Methods, Microkinetic Models, and Population Balances

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life11060570

Keywords

amyloid fibril growth; rare events; coarse-grained MD; population balance models

Funding

  1. Institute for Cooperative Upcycling of Polymers (iCOUP), an Energy Frontier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES), through the Ames Laboratory [DE-AC02-07CH11358]
  2. Lycan Professorship at the University of Illinois

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In this study, a simple microkinetic model and chiral dumbbell model were utilized to investigate the formation mechanism of amyloid fibrils and predict docking and locking rate constants. These rate constants were embedded in a multiscale model to assist in extracting the correct docking and locking rate constants from experimental or molecular simulation data.
Amyloid fibrils are thought to grow by a two-step dock-lock mechanism. However, previous simulations of fibril formation (i) overlook the bi-molecular nature of the docking step and obtain rates with first-order units, or (ii) superimpose the docked and locked states when computing the potential of mean force for association and thereby muddle the docking and locking steps. Here, we developed a simple microkinetic model with separate locking and docking steps and with the appropriate concentration dependences for each step. We constructed a simple model comprised of chiral dumbbells that retains qualitative aspects of fibril formation. We used rare events methods to predict separate docking and locking rate constants for the model. The rate constants were embedded in the microkinetic model, with the microkinetic model embedded in a population balance model for bottom-up multiscale fibril growth rate predictions. These were compared to top-down results using simulation data with the same model and multiscale framework to obtain maximum likelihood estimates of the separate lock and dock rate constants. We used the same procedures to extract separate docking and locking rate constants from experimental fibril growth data. Our multiscale strategy, embedding rate theories, and kinetic models in conservation laws should help to extract docking and locking rate constants from experimental data or long molecular simulations with correct units and without compromising the molecular description.

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