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Early events in protein aggregation: molecular flexibility and hydrophobicity/charge interaction in amyloid peptides as studied by molecular dynamics simulations
- Source :
- Proteins. 58(1)
- Publication Year :
- 2004
-
Abstract
- In a previous article (Zbilut et al., Biophys J 2003;85:3544-3557), we demonstrated how an aggregation versus folding choice could be approached considering hydrophobicity distribution and charge. In this work, our aim is highlighting the mutual interaction of charge and hydrophobicity distribution in the aggregation process. Use was made of two different peptides, both derived from a transmembrane protein (amyloid precursor protein; APP), namely, Abeta(1-28) and Abeta(1-40). Abeta(1-28) has a much lower aggregation propensity than Abeta(1-40). The results obtained by means of molecular dynamics simulations show that, when submitted to the most "aggregation-prone" environment, corresponding to the isoelectric point and consequently to zero net charge, both peptides acquire their maximum flexibility, but Abeta(1-40) has a definitely higher conformational mobility than Abeta(1-28). The absence of a hydrophobic "tail," which is the most mobile part of the molecule in Abeta(1-40), is the element lacking in Abeta(1-28) for obtaining a "fully aggregating" phenotype. Our results suggest that conformational flexibility, determined by both hydrophobicity and charge effect, is the main mechanistic determinant of aggregation propensity.
- Subjects :
- conformational flexibility
Models, Molecular
Amyloid
Protein Folding
Protein Conformation
Static Electricity
Protein aggregation
Biochemistry
amyloid fibrils
Molecular dynamics
Protein structure
Structural Biology
mental disorders
Static electricity
Amyloid precursor protein
Computer Simulation
conformational changes
aggregation versus folding
Molecular Biology
alpha to beta transition
biology
Chemistry
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
aggregation versus folding, conformational changes, alpha to beta transition, amyloid fibrils, conformational flexibility
Peptide Fragments
Folding (chemistry)
Crystallography
Isoelectric point
Biophysics
biology.protein
Thermodynamics
Protein folding
Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10970134
- Volume :
- 58
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Proteins
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....987ca8b1ced51087bb5c8724598302f2