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Decreasing amyloid toxicity through an increased rate of aggregation

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Sonzini, S 
Stanyon, HF 
Scherman, OA 

Abstract

Amyloid β is one of the peptides involved in the onset of Alzheimer's disease, yet the structure of the toxic species and its underlying mechanism remain elusive on account of the dynamic nature of the Aβ oligomerisation process. While it has been reported that incubation of Amyloid β (1-42) sequences (Aβ42) lead to formation of aggregates that vary in morphology and toxicity, we demonstrate that addition of a discrete macrocyclic host molecule, cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]), substantially reduces toxicity in the neuronal cell line SH-SY5Y. The macrocycle preferentially targets Phe residues in Aβ42 complexing them in a 2 : 1 fashion in neighboring peptide strands. A small but significant structural 'switch' occurs, which induces an increased aggregation rate, suggesting a different cell-uptake mechanism for Aβ42 in the presence of CB[8]. Dramatically increasing the rate of Aβ42 aggregation with CB[8] bypasses the toxic, oligomeric state offering an alternative approach to counter Alzheimer's disease.

Description

Keywords

Alzheimer Disease, Amyloid, Bridged-Ring Compounds, Cell Line, Humans, Imidazoles, Neurons, Protein Aggregation, Pathological

Journal Title

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1463-9076
1463-9084

Volume Title

19

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/K039520/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/G060649/1)
European Research Council (240629)
The authors are grateful for funding from an ERC Starting Investigator grant ASPiRe (No. 240629) and an EPSRC Programme grant SNaP (EP/G060649/1).
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