Abstract

Fibril formation of α-synuclein is linked with Parkinson's disease. The intrinsically disordered nature of α-syn provides extensive conformational plasticity and becomes difficult to characterize its transition pathway from native monomeric to disease-associated fibril form. We implemented different simulation methods such as steered dynamics-umbrella sampling, and replica-exchange and conventional MD simulations to access various conformational states of α-syn. Nineteen distinct intermediate structures were identified by free energy landscape and cluster analysis. They were then sorted based on secondary structure and solvent exposure of fibril-core residues to illustrate the fibril dissociation pathway. The analysis showed that following the initial dissociation of the polypeptide chain from the fibril, α-syn might form either compact-conformations by long-range interactions or extended-conformations stabilized by local interactions. This leads α-syn to adapt two different pathways. The secondary structure, solvation, contact distance, interaction energies and backbone dihedrals of thirty-two selected residues were analyzed for all the 19 intermediates. The results suggested that formation of β-turns, reorganization of salt bridges, and dihedral changes in the hydrophobic regions are the major driving forces for helix-fibril transition. Structural features of the intermediates also correlated with the earlier experimental and computational studies. The study provides critical information on the fibrillation pathway of α-syn.

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