posted on 2022-01-26, 18:37authored bySheng Zhang, Stan Yoo, Dalton T. Snyder, Benjamin B. Katz, Amy Henrickson, Borries Demeler, Vicki H. Wysocki, Adam G. Kreutzer, James S. Nowick
Aβ
dimers are a basic building block of many larger Aβ
oligomers and are among the most neurotoxic and pathologically relevant
species in Alzheimer’s disease. Homogeneous Aβ dimers
are difficult to prepare, characterize, and study because Aβ
forms heterogeneous mixtures of oligomers that vary in size and can
rapidly aggregate into more stable fibrils. This paper introduces
AβC18C33 as a disulfide-stabilized analogue of Aβ42 that forms stable homogeneous dimers in lipid environments
but does not aggregate to form insoluble fibrils. The AβC18C33 peptide is readily expressed in Escherichia
coli and purified by reverse-phase HPLC to give ca.
8 mg of pure peptide per liter of bacterial culture. SDS-PAGE establishes
that AβC18C33 forms homogeneous dimers in the membrane-like
environment of SDS and that conformational stabilization of the peptide
with a disulfide bond prevents the formation of heterogeneous mixtures
of oligomers. Mass spectrometric (MS) studies in the presence of dodecyl
maltoside (DDM) further confirm the formation of stable noncovalent
dimers. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy establishes that AβC18C33 adopts a β-sheet conformation in detergent solutions
and supports a model in which the intramolecular disulfide bond induces
β-hairpin folding and dimer formation in lipid environments.
Thioflavin T (ThT) fluorescence assays and transmission electron microscopy
(TEM) studies indicate that AβC18C33 does not undergo
fibril formation in aqueous buffer solutions and demonstrate that
the intramolecular disulfide bond prevents fibril formation. The recently
published NMR structure of an Aβ42 tetramer (PDB: 6RHY) provides a working
model for the AβC18C33 dimer, in which two β-hairpins
assemble through hydrogen bonding to form a four-stranded antiparallel
β-sheet. It is anticipated that AβC18C33 will
serve as a stable, nonfibrilizing, and noncovalent Aβ dimer
model for amyloid and Alzheimer’s disease research.