DocumentCode :
162750
Title :
Effects of graphitic nanomaterials on the dissociation pathway of amyloidogenic peptide dimer
Author :
Makarucha, Adam J. ; Todorova, Nevena ; Yarovsky, I.
Author_Institution :
Health Innovations Res. Inst., Melbourne, VIC, Australia
fYear :
2014
fDate :
2-6 Feb. 2014
Firstpage :
31
Lastpage :
34
Abstract :
The potential for nanomaterials to interact with biological molecules has been under significant scrutiny, specifically, in their possible role as scaffolds for protein aggregation that can result in various amyloid diseases. Here, we employed classical molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the effects of graphitic carbon nanomaterials on the structure, dynamics and dissociation pathway of a previously identified preformed dimer of amyloidogenic apoC-II(60-70) peptide [1, 2]. Our results showed the dimer interacting with the graphitic nanoparticles through π-π interactions. Free energy of dissociation calculations showed that the dimer is weakly bound to the C60 nanoparticle, while it is more strongly interacting with the elongated nanomaterials, such as carbon nanotube and graphene. The significant curvature of the C60 surface induced an increase in peptide mobility, which contributed to the weaker binding and dissociation of the dimer from the C60 surface. This suggests that C60 can act as a potential inhibitor for fibril growth. On the other hand, the stronger interactions between the elongated carbon nanomaterials and the apoC-II(60-70) dimer resulted in a separation of the dimer with one strand remaining adsorbed on the surface of the nanomaterial during the in-silico pull-off experiment. This suggests that the interaction between the bound peptide and the flat graphitic surfaces is stronger than the interactions between the peptide strands themselves. Our results suggest that flat surface carbon nanomaterials present favorable binding substrates for aromatic-rich peptides, and thus have the ability to act as templates to mediate peptide self-assembly and fibril growth.
Keywords :
adsorption; aggregation; biochemistry; biomechanics; bonds (chemical); carbon nanotubes; diseases; dissociation; elongation; free energy; fullerenes; graphite; molecular biophysics; molecular dynamics method; nanomedicine; nanoparticles; natural fibres; organic compounds; reaction kinetics theory; self-assembly; surface chemistry; thermochemistry; π-π interaction; C; C60 surface curvature; C60; amyloid disease; amyloidogenic apoC-II(60-70) peptide; amyloidogenic peptide dimer; aromatic-rich peptide; binding substrate; bound peptide-flat graphitic surface interaction; carbon nanotube interaction; classical molecular dynamics simulation; dimer dissociation pathway; dimer strand adsorption; dimer-C60 nanoparticle bond; dimer-graphitic nanoparticle interaction; dissociation calculation; elongated carbon nanomaterial interaction; fibril growth inhibitor; fibril growth mediation; flat surface carbon nanomaterial; free energy; graphene interaction; graphitic carbon nanomaterial effect; in-silico pull-off experiment; nanomaterial-biological molecule interaction; peptide mobility; peptide self-assembly mediation; peptide strand interaction; preformed dimer dynamics; preformed dimer structure; protein aggregation scaffold; templates; weak binding; Biological system modeling; Carbon; Graphene; Nanomaterials; Nanoparticles; Peptides; Proteins; aggregation; amyloid peptides; graphitic nanoparticles; molecular dynamics; potential of mean force;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (ICONN), 2014 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Adelaide, SA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICONN.2014.6965254
Filename :
6965254
Link To Document :
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