Rapid Conversion of Amyloid-Beta 1-40 Oligomers to Mature Fibrils through a Self-Catalytic Bimolecular Process
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MDPI
Materia
Oligomerization Aggregation kinetics Fibrillation Mechanism Catalysis Abeta
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Morel, B.; Carrasco-Jiménez, M.P.; Jurado, S.; Conejero-Lara, F. Rapid Conversion of Amyloid-Beta 1-40 Oligomers to Mature Fibrils through a Self-Catalytic Bimolecular Process. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22, 6370. https://doi.org/10.3390/ ijms22126370
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity (BIO2013-40697-R) (BIO2016-76640-R) - European Regional Development Fund of the European Union.Abstract
The formation of fibrillar aggregates of the amyloid beta peptide (Aβ) in the brain is one of
the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). A clear understanding of the different aggregation steps
leading to fibrils formation is a keystone in therapeutics discovery. In a recent study, we showed
that Aβ40 and Aβ42 form dynamic micellar aggregates above certain critical concentrations, which
mediate a fast formation of more stable oligomers, which in the case of Aβ40 are able to evolve
towards amyloid fibrils. Here, using different biophysical techniques we investigated the role of
different fractions of the Aβ aggregation mixture in the nucleation and fibrillation steps. We show
that both processes occur through bimolecular interplay between low molecular weight species
(monomer and/or dimer) and larger oligomers. Moreover, we report here a novel self-catalytic
mechanism of fibrillation of Aβ40, in which early oligomers generate and deliver low molecular
weight amyloid nuclei, which then catalyze the rapid conversion of the oligomers to mature amyloid
fibrils. This fibrillation catalytic activity is not present in freshly disaggregated low-molecular weight
Aβ40 and is, therefore, a property acquired during the aggregation process. In contrast to Aβ40, we
did not observe the same self-catalytic fibrillation in Aβ42 spheroidal oligomers, which could neither
be induced to fibrillate by the Aβ40 nuclei. Our results reveal clearly that amyloid fibrillation is a
multi-component process, in which dynamic collisions between different interacting species favor
the kinetics of amyloid nucleation and growth.