The role of shear forces in primary and secondary nucleation of amyloid fibrils
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Axell, Emil; Hu, Jing; Lindberg, Max; Dear, Alexander J.; Ortigosa-Pascual, Lei; Andrzejewska, Ewa A.; Sneideriene, Greta; Thacker, Dev; Knowles, Tuomas P. J.; Sparr, Emma; Linse, Sara
署名单位:
Lund University; Lund University; University of Cambridge
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-9536
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2322572121
发表日期:
2024-06-18
关键词:
air-water-interface
alpha-synuclein
aggregation kinetics
peptide
fluorescence
fibrillation
replication
mechanism
BEHAVIOR
domains
摘要:
Shear forces affect self -assembly processes ranging from crystallization to fiber formation. Here, the effect of mild agitation on amyloid fibril formation was explored for four peptides and investigated in detail for A f3 42, which is associated with Alzheimer's disease. To gain mechanistic insights into the effect of mild agitation, nonseeded and seeded aggregation reactions were set up at various peptide concentrations with and without an inhibitor. First, an effect on fibril fragmentation was excluded by comparing the monomer -concentration dependence of aggregation kinetics under idle and agitated conditions. Second, using a secondary nucleation inhibitor, Brichos, the agitation effect on primary nucleation was decoupled from secondary nucleation. Third, an effect on secondary nucleation was established in the absence of inhibitor. Fourth, an effect on elongation was excluded by comparing the seeding potency of fibrils formed under idle or agitated conditions. We find that both primary and secondary nucleation steps are accelerated by gentle agitation. The increased shear forces facilitate both the detachment of newly formed aggregates from catalytic surfaces and the rate at which molecules are transported in the bulk solution to encounter nucleation sites on the fibril and other surfaces. Ultrastructural evidence obtained with cryogenic transmission electron microscopy and free -flow electrophoresis in microfluidics devices imply that agitation speeds up the detachment of nucleated species from the fibril surface. Our findings shed light on the aggregation mechanism and the role of detachment for efficient secondary nucleation. The results inform on how to modulate the relative importance of different microscopic steps in drug discovery and investigations.