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Morphology and mechanical properties of multi-stranded amyloid fibrils probed by atomistic and coarse-grained simulations

Authors
Yoon, GwonchanLee, MyeongsangKim, KyungwooKim, Jae InChang, Hyun JoonBaek, InchulEom, KilhoNa, Sungsoo
Issue Date
Dec-2015
Publisher
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Keywords
amyloid proteins; multi-strandness; normal mode analysis; molecular dynamics
Citation
PHYSICAL BIOLOGY, v.12, no.6
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PHYSICAL BIOLOGY
Volume
12
Number
6
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/91814
DOI
10.1088/1478-3975/12/6/066021
ISSN
1478-3967
Abstract
Amyloid fibrils are responsible for pathogenesis of various diseases and exhibit the structural feature of an ordered, hierarchical structure such as multi-stranded helical structure. As the multi-strandedness of amyloid fibrils has recently been found to be highly correlated with their toxicity and infectivity, it is necessary to study how the hierarchical (i.e. multi-stranded) structure of amyloid fibril is formed. Moreover, although it has recently been reported that the nanomechanics of amyloid proteins plays a key role on the amyloid-induced pathogenesis, a critical role that the multi-stranded helical structure of the fibrils plays in their nanomechanical properties has not fully characterized. In this work, we characterize the morphology and mechanical properties of multi-stranded amyloid fibrils by using equilibrium molecular dynamics simulation and elastic network model. It is shown that the helical pitch of multi-stranded amyloid fibril is linearly proportional to the number of filaments comprising the amyloid fibril, and that multi-strandedness gives rise to improving the bending rigidity of the fibril. Moreover, we have also studied the morphology and mechanical properties of a single protofilament (filament) in order to understand the effect of cross-beta structure and mutation on the structures and mechanical properties of amyloid fibrils. Our study sheds light on the underlying design principles showing how the multi-stranded amyloid fibril is formed and how the structure of amyloid fibrils governs their nanomechanical properties.
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