Charge Dependent Retardation of Amyloid β Aggregation
by Hydrophilic Proteins
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Abstract
The
aggregation of amyloid β peptides (Aβ) into amyloid fibrils
is implicated in the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease. In light
of the increasing number of proteins reported to retard Aβ fibril
formation, we investigated the influence of small hydrophilic model
proteins of different charge on Aβ aggregation kinetics and
their interaction with Aβ. We followed the amyloid fibril formation
of Aβ40 and Aβ42 using thioflavin T fluorescence in the
presence of six charge variants of calbindin D<sub>9k</sub> and single-chain
monellin. The formation of fibrils was verified with transmission
electron microscopy. We observe retardation of the aggregation process
from proteins with net charge +8, +2, −2, and −4, whereas
no effect is observed for proteins with net charge of −6 and
−8. The single-chain monellin mutant with the highest net charge,
scMN+8, has the largest retarding effect on the amyloid fibril formation
process, which is noticeably delayed at as low as a 0.01:1 scMN+8
to Aβ40 molar ratio. scMN+8 is also the mutant with the fastest
association to Aβ40 as detected by surface plasmon resonance,
although all retarding variants of calbindin D<sub>9k</sub> and single-chain
monellin bind to Aβ40