Abstract

Peptides and proteins self-assemble into β-sheet-rich fibrils, amyloid, which extends its structure by incorporating peptide/protein molecules from solution. At the elongation edge, the peptide/protein molecule binds to the edge of the amyloid β-sheet. Such processes are transient and elusive when observing molecular details by experimental methods. We used a model protein system, peptide self-assembly mimic (PSAM), which mimics an amyloid-like structure within a globular protein by capping both edges of single-layer β sheet (SLB) with certain domains. We constructed a PSAM variant that lacks the capping domain on the C-terminal side to observe the structure of the β-sheet edge of the peptide self-assembly. This variant, which we termed PSAM-edge, proved to be soluble with a monomeric form. Urea-induced unfolding experiments revealed that PSAM-edge displayed two-state cooperative unfolding, indicating the N-terminal capping domain and extended SLB folded as one unit. The crystal structure showed that SLB was almost completely structured except for a few terminal residues. A molecular dynamics simulation results revealed that the SLB structure was retained while the C-terminal four residues fluctuated, which was consistent with the crystal structure. Our findings indicate that SLB is stable even when one side of the β-sheet edge is exposed to a solvent. This stability may prevent the dissociation of the attached peptide from the peptide self-assembly. Because of the scarcity of SLB proteins with exposed β-sheet edges in nature, successful construction of the PSAM-edge expands our understanding of protein folding and design.

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