4.5 Article

Formation of partially ordered oligomers of amyloidogenic hexapeptide (NFGAIL) in aqueous solution observed in molecular dynamics simulations

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 87, Issue 5, Pages 3000-3009

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.104.047076

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P20 RR015588, RR15588] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM067168, GM64458, R01 GM064458, GM67168] Funding Source: Medline

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A combined total of more than 600.0 ns molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent have been carried on systems containing either four peptides or a single peptide to investigate the early-stage aggregation process of an amyloidogenic hexapeptide, NFGAIL (residues 22-27 of the human islet amyloid polypeptide). Direct observation of the aggregation process was made possible by placing four peptides in a box of water with an effective concentration of 158 mg/ml to enhance the rate of aggregation. Partially ordered oligomers containing multistrand beta-sheets were observed which could be the precursory structures leading to the amyloid-forming embryonic nuclei. Comparative simulations on a single peptide suggested that the combined effect of higher peptide concentration and periodic boundary condition promoted compact monomers and the short-range interpeptide interactions favored the beta-extended conformation. Of particular interest was the persistent fluctuation of the size of the aggregates throughout the simulations, suggesting that dissociation of peptides from the disordered aggregates was an obligatory step toward the formation of ordered oligomers. Although 95% of peptides formed oligomers and 44% were in beta-extended conformations, only 16% of peptides formed multistrand beta-sheets. The disordered aggregates were mainly stabilized by hydrophobic interactions while cross-strand main-chain hydrogen bonds manifested the ordered oligomers. The transition to the beta-extended conformation was mildly cooperative due to short-range interactions between beta-extended peptides. Taken together, we propose that the role of hydrophobic interaction in the early stage of aggregation is to promote disordered aggregates and disfavor the formation of ordered nuclei and dissociation of the disordered oligomers could be the rate-limiting step at the initiation stage.

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