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      Mechanisms of amyloid formation revealed by solution NMR

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          Abstract

          Amyloid fibrils are proteinaceous elongated aggregates involved in more than fifty human diseases. Recent advances in electron microscopy and solid state NMR have allowed the characterization of fibril structures to different extents of refinement. However, structural details about the mechanism of fibril formation remain relatively poorly defined. This is mainly due to the complex, heterogeneous and transient nature of the species responsible for assembly; properties that make them difficult to detect and characterize in structural detail using biophysical techniques. The ability of solution NMR spectroscopy to investigate exchange between multiple protein states, to characterize transient and low-population species, and to study high molecular weight assemblies, render NMR an invaluable technique for studies of amyloid assembly. In this article we review state-of-the-art solution NMR methods for investigations of: (a) protein dynamics that lead to the formation of aggregation-prone species; (b) amyloidogenic intrinsically disordered proteins; and (c) protein–protein interactions on pathway to fibril formation. Together, these topics highlight the power and potential of NMR to provide atomic level information about the molecular mechanisms of one of the most fascinating problems in structural biology.

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          Most cited references232

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          Protein folding and misfolding.

          The manner in which a newly synthesized chain of amino acids transforms itself into a perfectly folded protein depends both on the intrinsic properties of the amino-acid sequence and on multiple contributing influences from the crowded cellular milieu. Folding and unfolding are crucial ways of regulating biological activity and targeting proteins to different cellular locations. Aggregation of misfolded proteins that escape the cellular quality-control mechanisms is a common feature of a wide range of highly debilitating and increasingly prevalent diseases.
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            Common structure of soluble amyloid oligomers implies common mechanism of pathogenesis.

            Soluble oligomers are common to most amyloids and may represent the primary toxic species of amyloids, like the Abeta peptide in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here we show that all of the soluble oligomers tested display a common conformation-dependent structure that is unique to soluble oligomers regardless of sequence. The in vitro toxicity of soluble oligomers is inhibited by oligomer-specific antibody. Soluble oligomers have a unique distribution in human AD brain that is distinct from fibrillar amyloid. These results indicate that different types of soluble amyloid oligomers have a common structure and suggest they share a common mechanism of toxicity.
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              How fast-folding proteins fold.

              An outstanding challenge in the field of molecular biology has been to understand the process by which proteins fold into their characteristic three-dimensional structures. Here, we report the results of atomic-level molecular dynamics simulations, over periods ranging between 100 μs and 1 ms, that reveal a set of common principles underlying the folding of 12 structurally diverse proteins. In simulations conducted with a single physics-based energy function, the proteins, representing all three major structural classes, spontaneously and repeatedly fold to their experimentally determined native structures. Early in the folding process, the protein backbone adopts a nativelike topology while certain secondary structure elements and a small number of nonlocal contacts form. In most cases, folding follows a single dominant route in which elements of the native structure appear in an order highly correlated with their propensity to form in the unfolded state.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                9886009
                36117
                Prog Nucl Magn Reson Spectrosc
                Prog Nucl Magn Reson Spectrosc
                Progress in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
                0079-6565
                1873-3301
                13 July 2015
                27 May 2015
                August 2015
                14 September 2015
                : 0
                : 86-104
                Affiliations
                Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology and School of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding authors. Tel.: +44 (0) 113 343 3270 (T.K. Karamanos), +44 (0) 113 343 3170 (S.E. Radford). T.Karamanos@ 123456leeds.ac.uk (T.K. Karamanos), s.e.radford@ 123456leeds.ac.uk (S.E. Radford)
                Article
                EMS64175
                10.1016/j.pnmrs.2015.05.002
                4568309
                26282197
                ce2d1c35-f1b0-4b1e-9440-d8137756cc53

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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                Categories
                Article

                nmr spectroscopy,amyloid fibrils,invisible states,intrisically disordered proteins,dynamic interactions

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