Abstract

Knowledge of the detailed mechanism by which proteins such as human αB- crystallin and human lysozyme inhibit amyloid beta (Aβ) peptide aggregation is crucial for designing treatment for Alzheimer's disease. Thus, unconstrained, atomistic molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent have been performed to characterize the Aβ17–42 assembly in presence of the αB-crystallin core domain and of lysozyme. Simulations reveal that both inhibitor proteins compete with inter-peptide interaction by binding to the peptides during the early stage of aggregation, which is consistent with their inhibitory action reported in experiments. However, the Aβ binding dynamics appear different for each inhibitor. The binding between crystallin and the peptide monomer, dominated by electrostatics, is relatively weak and transient due to the heterogeneous amino acid distribution of the inhibitor surface. The crystallin-bound Aβ oligomers are relatively long-lived, as they form more extensive contact surface with the inhibitor protein. In contrast, a high local density of arginines from lysozyme allows strong binding with Aβ peptide monomers, resulting in stable complexes. Our findings not only illustrate, in atomic detail, how the amyloid inhibitory mechanism of human αB-crystallin, a natural chaperone, is different from that of human lysozyme, but also may aid de novo design of amyloid inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia affecting nearly 38 million people worldwide

  • Several studies have suggested that aB-crystallin can protect the cell from Ab aggregation and toxicity at sub-stoichiometric ratios [31, 35, 36]

  • Single-molecule experiments performed at an equimolar ratio suggested formation of stable complexes between aB-crystallin and small Ab1–40 aggregates (n52–10) during disaggregation reaction [33]

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Summary

Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia affecting nearly 38 million people worldwide. In the present study, unconstrained, atomistic MD simulations in explicit water are employed to characterize the effect of the structured core domain of aB-crystallin as well as of lysozyme on the assembly of Ab17–42 peptides and the interaction between them (Fig. 1d).

Results
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