4.7 Article

Free Cholesterol Accelerates Aβ Self-Assembly on Membranes at Physiological Concentration

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23052803

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; amyloid aggregation; lipid bilayer; cholesterol; time-lapse AFM imaging; molecular dynamics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM096039, GM118006]
  2. [R01GM116961]

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The effects of membranes on the early-stage aggregation of amyloid beta (A beta) have been studied, showing that direct A beta-membrane interactions dramatically enhance the aggregation process. Cholesterol in membranes significantly enhances the aggregation kinetics and accelerates the formation and dissociation of aggregates. Cholesterol binds A beta monomers and changes their conformation.
The effects of membranes on the early-stage aggregation of amyloid beta (A beta) have come to light as potential mechanisms by which neurotoxic species are formed in Alzheimer's disease. We have shown that direct A beta-membrane interactions dramatically enhance the A beta aggregation, allowing for oligomer assembly at physiologically low concentrations of the monomer. Membrane composition is also a crucial factor in this process. Our results showed that apart from phospholipids composition, cholesterol in membranes significantly enhances the aggregation kinetics. It has been reported that free cholesterol is present in plaques. Here we report that free cholesterol, along with its presence inside the membrane, further accelerate the aggregation process by producing aggregates more rapidly and of significantly larger sizes. These aggregates, which are formed on the lipid bilayer, are able to dissociate from the surface and accumulate in the bulk solution; the presence of free cholesterol accelerates this dissociation as well. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations show that cholesterol binds A beta monomers and significantly changes the conformational sampling of A beta monomer; more than doubling the fraction of low-energy conformations compared to those in the absence of cholesterol, which can contribute to the aggregation process. The results indicate that A beta-lipid interaction is an important factor in the disease prone amyloid assembly process.

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