4.5 Article

What Drives Amyloid Molecules To Assemble into Oligomers and Fibrils?

期刊

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
卷 100, 期 2, 页码 450-458

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.11.041

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM34993, AG021601]
  2. University of Denver

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We develop a theory for three states of equilibrium of amyloid peptides: the monomer, oligomer, and fibril. We assume that the oligomeric state is a disordered micellelike collection of a few peptide chains held together loosely by hydrophobic interactions into a spherical hydrophobic core. We assume that fibrillar annyloid chains are aligned and further stabilized by steric zipper interactions-hydrogen bonding, steric packing, and specific hydrophobic side-chain contacts. The model makes a broad set of predictions that are consistent with experimental results: 1), Similar to surfactant micellization, amyloid oligomerization should increase with peptide concentration in solution. 2), The onset of fibrillization limits the concentration of oligomers in the solution. 3), The extent of A beta fibrillization increases with peptide concentration. 4), The predicted average fibril length versus monomer concentration agrees with data on a-synuclein. 5), Full fibril length distributions agree with data on a-synuclein. 6), Denaturants should melt out fibrils. And finally, 7), added salt should stabilize fibrils by reducing repulsions between amyloid peptide chains. It is of interest that small changes in solvent conditions can tip the equilibrium balance between oligomer and fibril and cause large changes in rates through effects on the transition-state barrier. This model may provide useful insights into the physical processes underlying amyloid diseases.

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