15 research outputs found

    Designed hairpin peptides interfere with amyloidogenesis pathways: fibril formation and cytotoxicity inhibition, interception of the preamyloid state.

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    Hairpin peptides bearing cross-strand Trp-Trp and Tyr-Tyr pairs at non-H-bonded strand sites modulate the aggregation of two unrelated amyloidogenic systems, human pancreatic amylin (hAM) and a-synuclein (alpha-syn), associated with type II diabetes and Parkinson's disease, respectively. In the case of hAM, we have previously reported that inhibition of amyloidogenesis is observed as an increase in the lag time to amyloid formation and a diminished thioflavin (ThT) fluorescence response. In this study, a reduced level of hAM fibril formation is confirmed by transmission electron microscopy imaging. Several of the hairpins tested were significantly more effective inhibitors than rat amylin. Moreover, a marked inhibitory effect on hAM-associated cytotoxicity by the more potent hairpin peptide is demonstrated. In the case of alpha-syn, the dominant effect of active hairpins was, besides a weakened ThT fluorescence response, the earlier appearance of insoluble aggregates that do not display amyloid characteristics with the few fibrils observed having abnormal morphology. We attribute the alteration of the alpha-synuclein aggregation pathway observed to the capture of a preamyloid state and diversion to nonamyloidogenic aggregates. These beta-hairpins represent a new class of amyloid inhibitors that bear no sequence similarity to the amyloid-producing polypeptides that are inhibited. A mechanistic rationale for these effects is proposed

    A hot-segment-based approach for the design of cross-amyloid interaction surface mimics as inhibitors of amyloid self-assembly.

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    The design of inhibitors of protein-protein interactions mediating amyloid self-assembly is a major challenge mainly due to the dynamic nature of the involved structures and interfaces. Interactions of amyloidogenic polypeptides with other proteins are important modulators of self-assembly. Here we present a hot-segment-linking approach to design a series of mimics of the IAPP cross-amyloid interaction surface with Aβ (ISMs) as nanomolar inhibitors of amyloidogenesis and cytotoxicity of Aβ, IAPP, or both polypeptides. The nature of the linker determines ISM structure and inhibitory function including both potency and target selectivity. Importantly, ISMs effectively suppress both self- and cross-seeded IAPP self-assembly. Our results provide a novel class of highly potent peptide leads for targeting protein aggregation in Alzheimer's disease, type 2 diabetes, or both diseases and a chemical approach to inhibit amyloid self-assembly and pathogenic interactions of other proteins as well
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