Dead-end street of protein folding:: Thermodynamic rationale of amyloid fibril formation

被引:52
作者
Perczel, Andras
Hudaky, Peter
Palfi, Villo K.
机构
[1] Eotvos Lorand Univ, Inst Chem, Lab Struct Chem & Biol, H-1117 Budapest, Hungary
[2] Eotvos Lorand Univ, Inst Chem, Modeling Grp HAS ELTE, H-1538 Budapest, Hungary
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja0747122
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
An increasing number of diseases, including Alzheimer's, have been found to be a result of the formation of amyloid aggregates that are practically independent of the original primary sequence of the protein(s). (Eakin, C. M.; Berman, A. J.; Miranker, A. D. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 2006, 13, 202-208.) Consequently, the driving force of the transformation from original to disordered amyloid fold is expected to lie in the protein backbone, which is common to all proteins. (Nelson, R.; Sawaya, M. R.; Balbirnie, M.; Madsen, A. O.; Riekel, C.; Grothe, R.; Eisenberg, D. Nature 2005, 435, 773-778. Wright, C. F; Teichmann, S. A.; Clarke, J.; Dobson, C. M. Nature 2005, 438, 878-881.) However, the exact explanation for the existence of such a "dead-end" structure is still unknown. Using systematic first principle calculations on carefully selected but large enough systems modeling the protein backbone we show that the beta-pleated sheet structure, the building block of amyloid fibers, is the thermodynamically most stable supramolecular arrangement of all the possible peptide dimers and oligomers both in vacuum and in aqueous environments. Even in a crystalline state (periodical, tight peptide attechment), the beta-pleated sheet assembly remains the most stable superstructure. The present theoretical study provides a quantum-level explanation for why proteins can take the amyloid state when local structural preferences jeopardize the functional native global fold and why it is a beta-pleated sheetlike structure they prefer.
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页码:14959 / 14965
页数:7
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