posted on 2022-08-01, 21:44authored bySiddhartha Banerjee, Brooke Holcombe, Sydney Ringold, Abigail Foes, Tanmayee Naik, Divya Baghel, Ayanjeet Ghosh
Amyloid plaques are one of the central manifestations
of Alzheimer’s
disease pathology. Aggregation of the amyloid beta (Aβ) protein
from amorphous oligomeric species to mature fibrils has been extensively
studied. However, structural heterogeneities in prefibrillar species,
and how that affects the structure of later-stage aggregates are not
yet well understood. The integration of infrared spectroscopy with
atomic force microscopy (AFM-IR) allows for identifying the signatures
of individual nanoscale aggregates by spatially resolving spectra.
We use AFM-IR to demonstrate that amyloid oligomers exhibit significant
structural variations as evidenced in their infrared spectra. This
heterogeneity is transmitted to and retained in protofibrils and fibrils.
We show that amyloid fibrils do not always conform to their putative
ordered structure and structurally different domains exist in the
same fibril. We further demonstrate that these structural heterogeneities
manifest themselves as a lack of β sheet structure in amyloid
plaques in Alzheimer’s tissue using infrared imaging.