4.6 Article

The Associative Memory, Water Mediated, Structure and Energy Model (AWSEM)-Amylometer: Predicting Amyloid Propensity and Fibril Topology Using an Optimized Folding Landscape Model

期刊

ACS CHEMICAL NEUROSCIENCE
卷 9, 期 5, 页码 1027-1039

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acschemneuro.7b00436

关键词

AWSEM-Amylometer; amyloid propensity; amyloid topology; AWSEM force field; energy landscape theory; protein folding

资金

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01 GM44557]
  2. D.R. Bullard-Welch Chair at Rice University [C-0016]
  3. National Science Foundation [OCI-0959097]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Amyloids are fibrillar protein aggregates with simple repeated structural motifs in their cores, usually beta-strands but sometimes alpha-helices. Identifying the amyloidprone regions within protein sequences is important both for understanding the mechanisms of amyloid-associated diseases and for understanding functional amyloids. Based on the crystal structures of seven cross-beta amyloidogenic peptides with different topologies and one recently solved cross-a fiber structure, we have developed a computational approach for identifying amyloidogenic segments in protein sequences using the Associative memory, Water mediated, Structure and Energy Model (AWSEM). The AWSEM-Amylometer performs favorably in comparison with other predictors in predicting aggregation-prone sequences in multiple data sets. The method also predicts well the specific topologies (the relative arrangement of beta-strands in the core) of the amyloid fibrils. An important advantage of the AWSEM-Amylometer over other existing methods is its direct connection with an efficient, optimized protein folding simulation model, AWSEM. This connection allows one to combine efficient and accurate search of protein sequences for amyloidogenic segments with the detailed study of the thermodynamic and kinetic roles that these segments play in folding and aggregation in the context of the entire protein sequence. We present new simulation results that highlight the free energy landscapes of peptides that can take on multiple fibril topologies. We also demonstrate how the Amylometer methodology can be straightforwardly extended to the study of functional amyloids that have the recently discovered cross-alpha fibril architecture.

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