Abstract
Parkinson's disease neurodegenerative brain tissue exhibits two biophysically distinct α-synuclein fiber isoforms - single stranded fibers that appear to be steric-zippers and double-stranded fibers with an undetermined structure. Herein, we describe a β-helical homology model of α-synuclein that exhibits stability in probabilistic and Monte Carlo simulations as a candidate for stable prional dimer conformers in equilibrium with double-stranded fibers and cytotoxic pore assemblies. Molecular models of β-helical pore assemblies are consistent with α-synucleinA53T transfected rat immunofluorescence epitope maps. Atomic force microscopy reveals that α-synuclein peptides aggregate into anisotropic fibrils lacking the density or circumference of a steric-zipper. Moreover, fibrillation was blocked by mutations designed to hinder β-helical but not steric-zipper conformations. β-helical species provide a structural basis for previously described biophysical properties that are incompatible with a steric-zipper, provide pathogenic mechanisms for familial human α-synuclein mutations, and offer a direct cytotoxic target for therapeutic development.
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CITATION STYLE
Schuman, B., Won, A., Brand-Arzamendi, K., Koprich, J. B., Wen, X. Y., Howson, P. A., … Yip, C. M. (2018). Non-steric-zipper models for pathogenic α-synuclein conformers. APL Bioengineering, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5023460
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