Abstract

A major cause of prion infectivity is the early formation of small, fibril-like aggregates consisting of the heptapeptide GNNQQNY. The prion aggregates exhibit a unique stacking mode in which the hydrophobic tyrosine (Y) is exposed outward, forming a bilayer β-sheet-stacking zipper structure. This stacking mode of the prion peptides, termed "Y-outward" structure for convenience, goes against the common understanding that, for other amyloid-forming peptides, the hydrophobic residues should be hidden within the peptide fibril, referred to as "Y-inward" structure. To explore the extraordinary stacking behaviors of the prion GNNQQNY peptides, two fibril models are constructed in a fashion of "Y-outward" and "Y-inward" stackings and then studied in silico to examine their thermodynamic stabilities and disaggregation pathways. The "Y-inward" structure indeed exhibits stronger thermodynamic stability than the "Y-outward" structure, according to potential energy and stacking energy calculations. To show how the peptide fibrils dissociate, we illustrated two disaggregation pathways. A dihedral-based free energy landscape was then calculated to examine the conformational degrees of freedom of the GNNQQNY chains in the "Y-outward" and "Y-inward" structures. Peptide chains lose more configurational entropy in the "Y-inward" structure than in the "Y-outward" structure, indicating that the prion peptides are prone to aggregate in a fashion of "Y-outward" stacking pattern due to its low conformational constraints. The prion-like aggregation of the GNNQQNY peptides into amyloid fibrils is primarily governed by the configuration entropy.

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