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Factors influencing compact-extended structure equilibrium in oligomers of Aβ1–40 peptide – an ion mobility mass spectrometry study

Sitkiewicz, Ewa and Kłoniecki, Marcin and Poznański, Jarosław and Bal, Wojciech and Dadlez, Michal (2014) Factors influencing compact-extended structure equilibrium in oligomers of Aβ1–40 peptide – an ion mobility mass spectrometry study. Journal of molecular biology, 426 (15). pp. 2871-2885. ISSN 1089-8638

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Official URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S...

Abstract

Oligomers formed by amyloid beta peptide (Aβ) are widely believed to be the main neurotoxic agent in Alzheimer’s disease. Studies discovered a broad variety of oligomeric forms, which display different levels of toxicity. Some of these forms may further assemble into mature fibrils, while other might be off-pathway from conversion to fibrils and assemble into alternative forms. To better understand a relationship between the structure and toxicity of Aβ oligomers, systematic characterization and classification of all possible forms is required, facilitating rational design of the beneficial modifiers of their activity. In previous ion-mobility analysis of Aβ1–40 oligomers, we have detected the coexistence of two alternative structural forms (compact and extended) in a pool of low-order Aβ1–40 oligomers. These forms may represent two pathways of the oligomer evolution, either leading to fibrils or to off-pathway oligomers, potential candidates for the neurotoxic species. Here, we have analyzed the impact of incubation time, the presence of selected metal ions and the effect of a series of point mutations on mutual population of alternative forms. We have shown that a salt bridge D23K28 provides stabilization of the compact form whereas G25 is required for the existence of the extended form. We have found that binding of metal ions also stabilizes the compact form. These results improve our understanding of the possible molecular mechanism of the bifurcation of structural evolution of non-monomeric Aβ species into an off-fibril pathway, ultimately leading to the formation of potentially neurotoxic species.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Q Science > Q Science (General)
Q Science > QC Physics
Divisions:Mass Spectrometry Laboratory
ID Code:728
Deposited By: dr Ewa Sitkiewicz
Deposited On:25 Jul 2014 08:03
Last Modified:24 Oct 2014 12:50

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