6 research outputs found
Ī²ā<i>N</i>āMethylaminoālāalanine (BMAA) Not Involved in Alzheimerās Disease
Ī²-<i>N</i>-Methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA)
is a neurotoxic agent implicated in ALS as well as Parkinsonās
and Alzheimerās diseases. It is produced by blue-green algae
and could find its way via fish and seafood into the human food supply.
Isolation from biological samples yields the compound in monomeric
and protein-bound form. It has been suggested that the protein-bound
fraction may result from genetic misincorporation into proteins in
place of serine. Concomitant misfolding of the mutated proteins may
be responsible for the neurological diseases. Recent reports that
contradict the misincorporation theory leave unresolved the nature
of the protein-bound form of BMAA. We have found from quantum mechanical
calculations on model systems that it is possible to bind BMAA with
high affinity in a noncovalent fashion to proteins. Because of our
interest in Alzheimerās disease, molecular dynamics simulations
were applied to search for such binding between BMAA and the Ī²-amyloid
peptide and to discover whether replacement of either of its two serine
residues could affect its aggregation into neurotoxic oligomers. No
stable noncovalently bound complex was found, and it was concluded
that incorporation of BMAA in place of serine would not alter the
conformational dynamics of the Ī²-amyloid peptide
The Binding of Fe(II)āHeme to the Amyloid Beta Peptide of Alzheimerās Disease: QM/MM Investigations
The structures of complexes between AĪ²(1ā42)
and ferroheme
(FeĀ(II)āheme) were determined by application of Amber and ONIOMĀ(B3LYP/6-31GĀ(d):Amber)
methodology. Attachment at each of the three His residues was investigated.
In each case, direct bonding of the iron to the His residue is augmented
by the formation of secondary salt bridges between the carboxylate
groups of the heme and positively charged residues of AĪ² (at
His13, by Lys16 and the N-terminus; at His14, by both Lys16 and Lys28;
at His6, by Arg5) or by H-bonding and hydrophobic interactions (at
His6, by Asp7 or Phe20). The results indicate a slight preference
for His13 followed by His6 and His14, with the lowest eight structures
lying within 36 kJ mol<sup>ā1</sup> of each other. The methodology
is not precise enough to permit a definitive statement as to the relative
stabilities, nor to the absolute binding affinities, which are predicted
to be less than 70 kJ mol<sup>ā1</sup>. The results bear on
the question of how heme and copper may bind simultaneously to AĪ².
They confirm that the <i>reduced</i> species can bind independently,
Cu<sup>+</sup> at His13āHis14 and FeĀ(II)āheme at His6
The Structures and Stabilities of the Complexes of Biologically Available Ligands with Fe(II) Porphine: An Ab Initio Study
FeĀ(II) porphine complexes were investigated at the āMP2/LBā//B3LYP/SB
level of theory where SB and LB denote the small and large basis sets,
6-31+GĀ(d) and 6-311+GĀ(2df,2p), respectively. Solvation effects due
to water and benzene were approximated by the IEFPCM procedure. Ligands
included H<sub>2</sub>O, Cl<sup>ā</sup>, and OH<sup>ā</sup> and Im (imidazole), CH<sub>3</sub>NH<sub>2</sub>, (CH<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>S, CH<sub>3</sub>CO<sub>2</sub><sup>ā</sup>,
CH<sub>3</sub>S<sup>ā</sup>, and CH<sub>3</sub>PhO<sup>ā</sup> as models of the side chains of His, Lys, Met, Asp/Glu, Cys, and
Tyr residues, respectively. FeĀ(II) porphine, <b>2</b>, and the
complexes <b>2</b>(H<sub>2</sub>O), <b>2</b>(Im), <b>2</b>(CH<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>S), <b>2</b>(CH<sub>3</sub>NH<sub>2</sub>), and <b>2</b>(H<sub>2</sub>O)<sub>2</sub> have
triplet ground states. All pentacoordinated complexes of <b>2</b> with negatively charged ligands have high spin quintet ground states,
while all hexacoodinated complexes with at least one Im ligand have
low spin singlet ground states. With the exception of <b>2</b>(Im)<sub>2</sub> and <b>2</b>(Im)Ā((CH<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>S), no hexacoordinated complexes are stable in water or benzene.
Redox properties are sensitive to the nature of the environment and
the ligand(s) attached to the iron center. With the exception of the
parent system, <b>2</b><sup><b>+</b></sup>/<b>2</b>, all complexes are predicted to have a negative reduction potential
relative to the standard hydrogen electrode in water. With neutral
ligand(s), the reduction potential is higher in the nonpolar environment.
The opposite is true with negatively charged ligands. The redox activity
of cytochromes, peroxidases, and catalases is discussed in the context
of the model parent systems
Fe(III)āHeme Complexes with the Amyloid Beta Peptide of Alzheimerās Disease: QM/MM Investigations of Binding and Redox Properties of Heme Bound to the His Residues of AĪ²(1ā42)
Pursuant
to our previous paper [<i>J. Chem. Theory Comput.</i> <b>2012</b>, <i>8</i>, 5150ā5158], the structures
of complexes between AĪ²(1ā42) and ferriheme (FeĀ(III)āhemeāH<sub>2</sub>O) were determined by application of Amber and ONIOMĀ(B3LYP/6-31GĀ(d):Amber)
methodology. Attachment at each of the three His residues was investigated.
As well as direct bonding of the iron to the His residue, bonding
is augmented by formation of secondary salt bridges between the carboxylate
groups of the heme and positively charged residues of AĪ² (at
His13, by Lys16 and the N-terminus; at His14, by Lys16; at His6, by
Arg5). The results indicate a slight preference for His13 followed
by His6 and His14, with the lowest 10 structures lying within 30 kJ
mol<sup>ā1</sup> of each other. The absolute binding affinities
are predicted to be approximately 30ā40 kJ mol<sup>ā1</sup>. Standard reduction potentials (<i>E</i>Ā°) are calculated
for various FeĀ(III)/FeĀ(II) couples. Regardless of the point of attachment
of the heme, <i>E</i>Ā° values are approximately ā0.6
V relative to the standard hydrogen electrode
Copper(I) Chelators for Alzheimerās Disease
A component of the
neurotoxicity of the beta amyloid peptide (AĪ²)
of Alzheimerās disease is its ability to generate superoxide,
hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals by reaction of its reduced
copper complex AĪ²/Cu<sup>+</sup> with molecular oxygen. The
objective of the present work was to devise compounds, L, that could
remove Cu<sup>+</sup> from AĪ²/Cu<sup>+</sup>, with the property
that L/Cu<sup>+</sup> itself would not be capable of reducing O<sub>2</sub> or hydrogen peroxide. We show by density functional calculations
that several pincer-type compounds with two imidazole rings and a
sulfur or nitrogen have the desired combination of Cu<sup>+</sup> binding
affinity and Cu<sup>2+</sup> reduction potential
NMR and Computational Studies of the Configurational Properties of Spirodioxyselenuranes. Are Dynamic Exchange Processes or Temperature-Dependent Chemical Shifts Involved?
Spirodioxyselenurane <b>4a</b> and several substituted
analogs
revealed unexpected <sup>1</sup>H NMR behavior. The diastereotopic
methylene hydrogens of <b>4a</b> appeared as an AB quartet at
low temperature that coalesced to a singlet upon warming to 267 K,
suggesting a dynamic exchange process with a relatively low activation
energy. However, DFT computational investigations indicated high activation
energies for exchange via inversion through the selenium center and
for various pseudorotation processes. Moreover, the NMR behavior was
unaffected by the presence of water or acid catalysts, thereby ruling
out reversible SeāO or benzylic CāO cleavage as possible
stereomutation pathways. Remarkably, when <b>4a</b> was heated
beyond 342 K, the singlet was transformed into a new AB quartet. Further
computations indicated that a temperature dependence of the chemical
shifts of the diastereotopic protons results in convergence upon heating,
followed by crossover and divergence at still higher temperatures.
The NMR behavior is therefore not due to dynamic exchange processes,
but rather to temperature dependence of the chemical shifts of the
diastereotopic hydrogens, which are coincidentally equivalent at intermediate
temperatures. These results suggest the general need for caution in
ascribing the coalescence of variable-temperature NMR signals of diastereotopic
protons to dynamic exchange processes that could instead be due to
temperature-dependent chemical shifts and highlight the importance
of corroborating postulated exchange processes through additional
computations or experiments wherever possible