4.4 Article

Amphotericin B binds to amyloid fibrils and delays their formation: A therapeutic mechanism?

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 42, Issue 20, Pages 6228-6233

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi0270384

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The membrane-active antifungal agent amphotericin B (AmB) is one of the few agents shown to slow the course of prion diseases in animals. Congo Red and other small molecules have been reported to directly inhibit amyloidogenesis in both prion and Alzheimer peptide model systems via specific binding. We propose that it is possible that AmB may act similarly to physically prevent conversion of the largely cc-helical prion protein (PrP) to the pathological beta-sheet aggregate protease-resistant isoform (PrPres) in prion disease and by analogy prevent fibrillization in amyloid diseases. To assess whether AmB is capable of binding specifically to amyloid fibrils as does Congo Red, we have used the insulin fibril and Abeta 25-35 amyloid model fibril system. We find that AmB does bind strongly to both insulin (K-d = 1.1 muM) and Abeta 25-35 amyloid (K-d = 6.4 muM) fibrils but not to native insulin. Binding is characterized by a red-shifted AmB spectrum indicative of a more hydrophobic environment. Thus AmB seems to have a complementary face for amyloid fibrils but not the native protein. In addition, AmB interacts specifically with Congo Red, a known fibril-binding agent. In kinetic fibril formation studies, AmB was able to significantly kinetically delay the formation of Abeta 25-35 fibrils at pH 7.4 but not insulin fibrils at pH 2.

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