Abstract

A detailed understanding of the molecular pathways for amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide aggregation from monomers into amyloid fibrils, a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease, is crucial for the development of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. We investigate the molecular details of peptide fibrillization in vitro by perturbing this process through addition of differently charged metal ions. Here, we used a monovalent probe, the silver ion, that, similarly to divalent metal ions, binds to monomeric Aβ peptide and efficiently modulates Aβ fibrillization. On the basis of our findings, combined with our previous results on divalent zinc ions, we propose a model that links the microscopic metal-ion binding to Aβ monomers to its macroscopic impact on the peptide self-assembly observed in bulk experiments. We found that substoichiometric concentrations of the investigated metal ions bind specifically to the N-terminal region of Aβ, forming a dynamic, partially compact complex. The metal-ion bound state appears to be incapable of aggregation, effectively reducing the available monomeric Aβ pool for incorporation into fibrils. This is especially reflected in a decreased fibril-end elongation rate. However, because the bound state is significantly less stable than the amyloid state, Aβ peptides are only transiently redirected from fibril formation, and eventually almost all Aβ monomers are integrated into fibrils. Taken together, these findings unravel the mechanistic consequences of delaying Aβ aggregation via weak metal-ion binding, quantitatively linking the contributions of specific interactions of metal ions with monomeric Aβ to their effects on bulk aggregation.

Highlights

  • A detailed understanding of the molecular pathways for amyloid-␤ (A␤) peptide aggregation from monomers into amyloid fibrils, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease, is crucial for the development of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies

  • On the basis of our findings, combined with our previous results on divalent zinc ions, we propose a model that links the microscopic metal-ion binding to A␤ monomers to its macroscopic impact on the peptide self-assembly observed in bulk experiments

  • With pentameric formyl thiophene acetic acid (pFTAA) we observed the typical sigmoidal aggregation kinetic traces [6, 50], whereas the monitoring of aggregation by thioflavin T (ThT) is interfered by interactions of Ag(I) and ThT [52, 53] (Fig. S1), which makes ThT unsuitable for aggregation kinetics in the presence of Ag(I)

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

A␤, amyloid-␤; pFTAA, pentameric formyl thiophene acetic acid; ThT, thioflavin T; CPMG, Carr–Purcell–Meiboom—Gill; AFM, atomic force microscopy; HSQC, heteronuclear single quantum coherence. In addition to changes in charge, the ionic radii of Ag(I) and divalent metal ions differ, together with small deviations in preferred binding ligands and coordination geometry (Table S1) Both in vitro and in vivo studies showed Cu(I) replacement by Ag(I) ions in copper-containing proteins [37,38,39]. 1) monomeric A␤ binds Ag(I) ions in the N-terminal part, forming a dynamic metal-ion bound complex; 2) the weak metal-ion binding prevents monomeric A␤ from incorporation into fibrils; and 3) this leads to attenuation of the A␤ fibrillization kinetics in particular by reduction of the fibril-end elongation rate These results are strikingly similar to effects of Zn(II) ions [14], which suggests a common mechanism of interaction of monovalent Ag(I) and divalent Zn(II) ions with A␤ peptides. This study links quantitatively the microscopic perturbation of metal-ion binding to A␤ monomers with its effect on the bulk peptide aggregation process

Results and discussion
Concluding remarks
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