The Alzheimer's peptide a beta adopts a collapsed coil structure in water.

Article Details

Citation

Zhang S, Iwata K, Lachenmann MJ, Peng JW, Li S, Stimson ER, Lu Y, Felix AM, Maggio JE, Lee JP

The Alzheimer's peptide a beta adopts a collapsed coil structure in water.

J Struct Biol. 2000 Jun;130(2-3):130-41.

PubMed ID
10940221 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The self-assembly of the soluble peptide Abeta into Alzheimer's disease amyloid is believed to involve a conformational change. Hence the solution conformation of Abeta is of significant interest. In contrast to studies in other solvents, in water Abeta is collapsed into a compact series of loops, strands, and turns and has no alpha-helical or beta-sheet structure. Conformational stabilization is primarily attributed to van der Waals and electrostatic forces. A large conspicuous uninterrupted hydrophobic patch covers approximately 25% of the surface. The compact coil structure appears meta-stable, and because fibrillization leads to formation of intermolecular beta-sheet secondary structure, a global conformational rearrangement is highly likely. A molecular hypothesis for amyloidosis includes at least two primary driving forces, changes in solvation thermodynamics during formation of amyloid deposits and relief of internal conformational stress within the soluble precursor during formation of lower-energy amyloid fibrils.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Amyloid beta A4 proteinP05067Details