Protein aggregation into amyloid fibrils is the archetype of aberrant biomolecular self-assembly processes, with more than 50 diseases associated that are mostly uncurable. Understanding aggregation mechanisms is thus of fundamental importance and goes in parallel with the characterization of the structures of the transient oligomers formed in the process. Oligomers have been proven elusive to high-resolution structural techniques, while the large sizes and long-time scales typical of aggregation processes have limited, so far, the use of computational methods. To surmount these limitations, we introduce here multi-eGO, an atomistic, hybrid structure-based model, which leveraging on the knowledge of monomers conformational dynamics and of fibril structures, can efficiently capture the essential structural and kinetics aspects of protein aggregation. Multi-eGO molecular dynamics simulations can describe the aggregation kinetics of thousands of monomers. The concentration dependence of the simulated kinetics, as well as the structural features of the resulting fibrils, are in qualitative agreement with in vitro experiments on an amyloidogenic peptide of Transthyretin, a protein responsible for one of the most common cardiac amyloidosis. Multi-eGO simulations allow to observe in time and at atomic resolution the formation of primary nuclei in a sea of transient lower order oligomers, to follow their growth and the subsequent secondary nucleation events, till the maturation of multiple fibrils. Multi-eGO, combined with the many experimental techniques deployed to study protein aggregation, can provide the structural basis needed to advance the design of molecules targeting amyloidogenic diseases.

Multi-{eGO}: an in-silico lens to look into protein aggregation kinetics at atomic resolution / E. Scalone, L. Broggini, C. Visentin, D. Erba, F. Ba( (c))i('(c)) Toplek, K. Peqini, S. Pellegrino, S. Ricagno, C. Paissoni, C. Camilloni. - (2022 Feb 18). [10.1101/2022.02.18.481033]

Multi-{eGO}: an in-silico lens to look into protein aggregation kinetics at atomic resolution

E. Scalone
Primo
;
L. Broggini
Secondo
;
C. Visentin;K. Peqini;S. Pellegrino;S. Ricagno;C. Paissoni
Penultimo
;
C. Camilloni
Ultimo
2022

Abstract

Protein aggregation into amyloid fibrils is the archetype of aberrant biomolecular self-assembly processes, with more than 50 diseases associated that are mostly uncurable. Understanding aggregation mechanisms is thus of fundamental importance and goes in parallel with the characterization of the structures of the transient oligomers formed in the process. Oligomers have been proven elusive to high-resolution structural techniques, while the large sizes and long-time scales typical of aggregation processes have limited, so far, the use of computational methods. To surmount these limitations, we introduce here multi-eGO, an atomistic, hybrid structure-based model, which leveraging on the knowledge of monomers conformational dynamics and of fibril structures, can efficiently capture the essential structural and kinetics aspects of protein aggregation. Multi-eGO molecular dynamics simulations can describe the aggregation kinetics of thousands of monomers. The concentration dependence of the simulated kinetics, as well as the structural features of the resulting fibrils, are in qualitative agreement with in vitro experiments on an amyloidogenic peptide of Transthyretin, a protein responsible for one of the most common cardiac amyloidosis. Multi-eGO simulations allow to observe in time and at atomic resolution the formation of primary nuclei in a sea of transient lower order oligomers, to follow their growth and the subsequent secondary nucleation events, till the maturation of multiple fibrils. Multi-eGO, combined with the many experimental techniques deployed to study protein aggregation, can provide the structural basis needed to advance the design of molecules targeting amyloidogenic diseases.
Settore BIO/10 - Biochimica
18-feb-2022
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.02.18.481033v2.full
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1010214
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