Author/Authors :
Victoria A. Wagoner، نويسنده , , Mookyung Cheon، نويسنده , , Iksoo Chang، نويسنده , , Carol K. Hall، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Assembly of normally soluble proteins into ordered aggregates, known as amyloid fibrils, is a cause or associated symptom of numerous human disorders, including Alzheimerʹs and the prion diseases. Here, we test the ability of discontinuous molecular dynamics (DMD) simulations based on PRIME20, a new intermediate-resolution protein force field, to predict which designed hexapeptide sequences will form fibrils, which will not, and how this depends on temperature and concentration. Simulations were performed on 48-peptide systems containing STVIIE, STVIFE, STVIVE, STAIIE, STVIAE, STVIGE, and STVIEE starting from random-coil configurations. By the end of the simulations, STVIIE and STVIFE (which form fibrils in vitro) form fibrils over a range of temperatures, STVIEE (which does not form fibrils in vitro) does not form fibrils, and STVIVE, STAIIE, STVIAE, and STVIGE (which do not form fibrils in vitro) form fibrils at lower temperatures but stop forming fibrils at higher temperatures. At the highest temperatures simulated, the results on the fibrillization propensity of the seven short de novo designed peptides all agree with the experiments of López de la Paz and Serrano. Our results suggest that the fibrillization temperature (temperature above which fibrils cease to form) is a measure of fibril stability and that by rank ordering the fibrillization temperatures of various sequences, PRIME20/DMD simulations could be used to ascertain their relative fibrillization propensities. A phase diagram showing regions in the temperature–concentration plane where fibrils are formed in our simulations is presented.
Keywords :
fibrils , fibrillization propensity , fibril stability , coarse-grained model , discontinuous molecular dynamics