Abstract

Water plays a crucial role in the formation and destruction of biomolecular structures. The mechanism for destroying biomolecular structures was thought to be an active breaking of hydrogen bonds by water molecules. However, using nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations, in which an amyloid-β amyloid fibril was destroyed via infrared free-electron laser (IR-FEL) irradiation, we discovered a new mechanism, in which water molecules disrupt protein aggregates. The intermolecular hydrogen bonds formed by C═O and N-H in the fibril are broken at each pulse of laser irradiation. These bonds spontaneously re-form after the irradiation in many cases. However, when a water molecule happens to enter the gap between C═O and N-H, it inhibits the re-formation of the hydrogen bonds. Such sites become defects in the regularly aligned hydrogen bonds, from which all hydrogen bonds in the intermolecular β-sheet are broken as the fraying spreads. This role of water molecules is entirely different from other known mechanisms. This new mechanism can explain the recent experiments showing that the amyloid fibrils are not destroyed by laser irradiation under dry conditions. Additionally, we found that helix structures form more after the amyloid disruption; this is because the resonance frequency is different in a helix structure. Our findings provide a theoretical basis for the application of IR-FEL to the future treatment of amyloidosis.

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