posted on 2024-09-30, 21:29authored byJune M. Kenyaga, Wei Qiang
Molecular-level structural polymorphisms of β-amyloid
(Aβ)
fibrils have recently been recognized as pathologically significant.
High-resolution solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR) spectroscopy
has been utilized to study these structural polymorphisms, particularly
in ex-vivo fibrils seeded from amyloid extracts of post-mortem brain
tissues of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients. One unaddressed
question in current ex-vivo seeding protocol is whether fibrillation
from exogenous monomeric Aβ peptides, added to the extracted
seeds, can be quantitatively suppressed. Addressing this issue is
critical because uncontrolled fibrillation could introduce biased
molecular structural polymorphisms in the resulting fibrils. Here,
we present a workflow to optimize the key parameters of ex-vivo seeding
protocols, focusing on the quantification of amyloid extraction and
the selection of exogenous monomeric Aβ concentrations to minimize
nonseeded fibrillation. We validate this workflow using three structurally
different 40-residue Aβ (Aβ40) fibrillar seeds,
demonstrating their ability to propagate their structural features
to exogenous wild-type Aβ40.