Factors that drive peptide assembly from native to amyloid structures: experimental and theoretical analysis of [leu-5]-enkephalin mutants.

Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

J Phys Chem B, Volume 118, Issue 26, p.7247-56 (2014)

Keywords:

Amino Acid Sequence, Amyloid, Crystallography, X-Ray, Enkephalins, Mass Spectrometry, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nanostructures, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary

Abstract:

<p>Five different mutants of [Leu-5] Enkephalin YGGFL peptide have been investigated for fibril formation propensities. The early oligomer structures have been probed with a combination of ion-mobility mass spectrometry and computational modeling. The two peptides YVIFL and YVVFL form oligomers and amyloid-like fibrils. YVVFV shows an early stage oligomer distribution similar to those of the previous two, but amyloid-like aggregates are less abundant. Atomic resolution X-ray structures of YVVFV show two different modes of interactions at the dry interface between steric zippers and pairs of antiparallel β-sheets, but both are less favorable than the packing motif found in YVVFL. Both YVVFV and YVVFL can form a Class 6 steric zipper. However, in YVVFV, the strands between mating sheets are parallel to each other and in YVVFL they are antiparallel. The overall data highlight the importance of structurally characterizing high order oligomers within oligomerization pathways in studies of nanostructure assembly. </p>

PDB: 
4ONK 4OLR
Detector: 
Q315
Beamline: 
24-ID-E