Login / Signup

The structure of tyrosine-10 favors ionic conductance of Alzheimer's disease-associated full-length amyloid-β channels.

Abhijith G KarkisavalRowan HassanAndrew NguyenBenjamin BalsterFaisal AbedinRatneshwar LalSuren A Tatulian
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Amyloid β (Aβ) ion channels destabilize cellular ionic homeostasis, which contributes to neurotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease. The relative roles of various Aβ isoforms are poorly understood. We use bilayer electrophysiology, AFM imaging, circular dichroism, FTIR and fluorescence spectroscopy to characterize channel activities of four most prevalent Aβ peptides, Aβ 1-42 , Aβ 1-40 , and their pyroglutamylated forms (AβpE 3-42 , AβpE 3-40 ) and correlate them with the peptides' structural features. Solvent-induced fluorescence splitting of tyrosine-10 is discovered and used to assess the sequestration from the solvent and membrane insertion. Aβ 1-42 effectively embeds in lipid membranes, contains large fraction of β-sheet in a β-barrel-like structure, forms multi-subunit pores in membranes, and displays well-defined ion channel features. In contrast, the other peptides are partially solvent-exposed, contain minimal β-sheet structure, form less-ordered assemblies, and produce irregular ionic currents. These findings illuminate the structural basis of Aβ neurotoxicity through membrane permeabilization and may help develop therapies that target Aβ-membrane interactions.
Keyphrases