Evolution of large Aβ16–22 aggregates at atomic details and potential of mean force associated to peptide unbinding and fragmentation events

Author:

Iorio Antonio12,Timr Štěpán3,Chiodo Letizia4,Derreumaux Philippe125,Sterpone Fabio12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Biochimie Théorique (UPR 9080), CNRS Université Paris Cité Paris France

2. Institut de Biologie Physico‐Chimique Fondation Edmond de Rothschild Paris France

3. J. Heyrovský Institute of Physical Chemistry, Czech Academy of Sciences Prague Czech Republic

4. Research Unit in Non Linear Physics and Mathematical Modeling Engineering Department of Campus Bio‐Medico University of Rome Rome Italy

5. Institut Universitaire de France Paris France

Abstract

AbstractAtomic characterization of large nonfibrillar aggregates of amyloid polypeptides cannot be determined by experimental means. Starting from β‐rich aggregates of Y and elongated topologies predicted by coarse‐grained simulations and consisting of more than 100 Aβ16–22 peptides, we performed atomistic molecular dynamics (MD), replica exchange with solute scaling (REST2), and umbrella sampling simulations using the CHARMM36m force field in explicit solvent. Here, we explored the dynamics within 3 μs, the free energy landscape, and the potential of mean force associated with either the unbinding of one single peptide in different configurations within the aggregate or fragmentation events of a large number of peptides. Within the time scale of MD and REST2, we find that the aggregates experience slow global conformational plasticity, and remain essentially random coil though we observe slow beta‐strand structuring with a dominance of antiparallel beta‐sheets over parallel beta‐sheets. Enhanced REST2 simulation is able to capture fragmentation events, and the free energy of fragmentation of a large block of peptides is found to be similar to the free energy associated with fibril depolymerization by one chain for longer Aβ sequences.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Structural Biology

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