Amino acid substitutions [K16A] and [K28A] distinctly affect amyloid β-protein oligomerization

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Abstract

Amyloid β-protein (A β) assembles into oligomers that play a seminal role in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a leading cause of dementia among the elderly. Despite undisputed importance of A β oligomers, their structure and the basis of their toxicity remain elusive. Previous experimental studies revealed that the [K16A] substitution strongly inhibits toxicity of the two predominant A β alloforms in the brain, A β40 and A β42, whereas the [K28A] substitution exerts only a moderate effect. Here, folding and oligomerization of [A16]A β40, [A28]A β40, [A16]A β42, and [A28]A β42 are examined by discrete molecular dynamics (DMD) combined with a four-bead implicit solvent force field, DMD4B-HYDRA, and compared to A β40 and A β42 oligomer formation. Our results show that both substitutions promote A β40 and A β42 oligomerization and that structural changes to oligomers are substitution- and alloform-specific. The [K28A] substitution increases solvent-accessible surface area of hydrophobic residues and the intrapeptide N-to-C terminal distance within oligomers more than the [K16A] substitution. The [K16A] substitution decreases the overall β-strand content, whereas the [K28A] substitution exerts only a modest change. Substitution-specific tertiary and quaternary structure changes indicate that the [K16A] substitution induces formation of more compact oligomers than the [K28A] substitution. If the structure-function paradigm applies to A β oligomers, then the observed substitution-specific structural changes in A β40 and A β42 oligomers are critical for understanding the structural basis of A β oligomer toxicity and correct identification of therapeutic targets against AD.

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žganec, M., Kruczek, N., & Urbanc, B. (2016). Amino acid substitutions [K16A] and [K28A] distinctly affect amyloid β-protein oligomerization. Journal of Biological Physics, 42(3), 453–476. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10867-016-9417-4

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