Abstract

Calcitonin is a 32-amino acid thyroid hormone that can form amyloid fibrils. The structural basis of the fibril formation and stabilization is still debated and poorly understood. The reason is that NMR data strongly suggest antiparallel β-sheet calcitonin assembly, whereas modeling studies on the short DFNKF peptide (corresponding to the sequence from Asp15 to Phe19 of human calcitonin and reported as the minimal amyloidogenic module) show that it assembles with parallel β-sheets. In this work, we first predict the structure of human calcitonin through two complementary molecular dynamics (MD) methods, finding that human calcitonin forms an α-helix. We use extensive MD simulations to compare previously proposed calcitonin fibril structures. We find that two conformations, the parallel arrangement and one of the possible antiparallel structures (with Asp15 and Phe19 aligned), are highly stable and ordered. Nonetheless, fibrils with parallel molecules show bulky loops formed by residues 1 to 7 located on the same side, which could limit or prevent the formation of larger amyloids. We investigate fibrils formed by the DFNKF peptide by simulating different arrangements of this amyloidogenic core sequence. We show that DFNKF fibrils are highly stable when assembled in parallel β-sheets, whereas they quickly unfold in antiparallel conformation. Our results indicate that the DFNKF peptide represents only partially the full-length calcitonin behavior. Contrary to the full-length polypeptide, in fact, the DFNKF sequence is not stable in antiparallel conformation, suggesting that the residue flanking the amyloidogenic peptide contributes to the stabilization of the experimentally observed antiparallel β-sheet packing.

Highlights

  • Calcitonin is a 32-amino acid thyroid hormone that can form amyloid fibrils

  • In the first approach, we build the extended structures of salmon calcitonin (sCT) and Human calcitonin (hCT) and perform 30-ns replica exchange molecular dynamics (REMD) simulations followed by 500-ns classical MD

  • The same hCT structure is obtained with two independent methods, ab initio folding based on REMD and homology modeling, showing the high reliability of the proposed structure

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Summary

Introduction

Calcitonin is a 32-amino acid thyroid hormone that can form amyloid fibrils. The structural basis of the fibril formation and stabilization is still debated and poorly understood. We find that two conformations, the parallel arrangement and one of the possible antiparallel structures (with Asp and Phe aligned), are highly stable and ordered. We investigate fibrils formed by the DFNKF peptide by simulating different arrangements of this amyloidogenic core sequence. We show that DFNKF fibrils are highly stable when assembled in parallel ␤-sheets, whereas they quickly unfold in antiparallel conformation. Contrary to the full-length polypeptide, the DFNKF sequence is not stable in antiparallel conformation, suggesting that the residue flanking the amyloidogenic peptide contributes to the stabilization of the experimentally observed antiparallel ␤-sheet packing. Amyloid fibrils are protein assemblies often associated to serious diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Creutzfeldt-Jakob’s, Parkinson’s, and medullary thyroid carcinoma. Tel.: 39-02-2399-4142; amphipathic materials of fungi and bacteria, and a key constituent of spider silk [1]

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