Abstract

Characterization of the polymorphic structural range of Aβ oligomers is important to the understanding of the mechanisms of toxicity. Yet for highly polymorphic ensembles, experimental structural elucidation is difficult. Here, we use a combination of NMR solvent protection experiments and computational structural screening to identify major species in the amyloid conformational ensemble. We examined the polymorphic pentamer and fibril seeds of Aβ42 and its mutants and compared the theoretical backbone amide protection obtained from simulations with experimental hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange protection ratio. We observed that highly flexible pentamers do not share structural similarities with fibril seed oligomers, except the turn regions. We found that a novel amyloid structural motif of a triple β-sheet, with the N-terminal residues interacting with the core (Lys(17)-Glu(22)) β-sheet region, correlates with H/D exchange protection. The triple β-sheet Aβ42 oligomer has a minimal exposure of hydrophobic residues and is further stabilized by the E22Q (Dutch) mutation in Alzheimer disease. The experimental H/D exchange solvent protection ratio implies that triple β-sheet fibrils and globulomers could coexist in the Aβ42 ensemble, pointing to a broad heterogeneous aggregate population. Our results suggest that an approach that combines computational modeling with NMR protection data can be a useful strategy for obtaining clues to the preferred conformational species of the assemblies in solution and help in alleviating experimental difficulties and consequently possible errors in the exchange data for Aβ42 fibrils.

Highlights

  • Experimental structural elucidation of polymorphic amyloid ensembles is difficult

  • We found a novel amyloid structural motif of a triple ␤-sheet by comparing computational and experimental H/D exchange

  • We examined the polymorphic pentamer and fibril seeds of A␤42 and its mutants and compared the theoretical backbone amide protection obtained from simulations with experimental hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange protection ratio

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Summary

Background

Experimental structural elucidation of polymorphic amyloid ensembles is difficult. Results: We found a novel amyloid structural motif of a triple ␤-sheet by comparing computational and experimental H/D exchange. The triple ␤-sheet A␤42 oligomer has a minimal exposure of hydrophobic residues and is further stabilized by the E22Q (Dutch) mutation in Alzheimer disease. Our results suggest that an approach that combines computational modeling with NMR protection data can be a useful strategy for obtaining clues to the preferred conformational species of the assemblies in solution and help in alleviating experimental difficulties and possible errors in the exchange data for A␤42 fibrils. The problem is to obtain the polymorphic range, preferred aggregate states, pathways leading to these, time scales, and their mechanisms of toxicity. Figuring these out is of crucial importance for understanding amyloid-related diseases and pharmacological strategies. Delineating the observed and likely aggregation states is an important goal

The abbreviations used are
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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