De Novo Design of Self-Assembled Hexapeptides as β‑Amyloid (Aβ) Peptide Inhibitors

The ability of peptides to construct specific secondary structures provides a useful function for biomaterial design that cannot be achieved with traditional organic molecules and polymers. Inhibition of amyloid formation is a promising therapeutic approach for the treatment of neurodegenerative dis...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS chemical neuroscience 2014-10, Vol.5 (10), p.972-981
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Qiuming, Liang, Guizhao, Zhang, Mingzhen, Zhao, Jun, Patel, Kunal, Yu, Xiang, Zhao, Chao, Ding, Binrong, Zhang, Ge, Zhou, Feimeng, Zheng, Jie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The ability of peptides to construct specific secondary structures provides a useful function for biomaterial design that cannot be achieved with traditional organic molecules and polymers. Inhibition of amyloid formation is a promising therapeutic approach for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. Existing peptide-based inhibitors are mainly derived from original amyloid sequences, which have very limited sequence diversity and activity. It is highly desirable to explore other peptide-based inhibitors that are not directly derived from amyloid sequences. Here, we develop a hybrid high-throughput computational method to efficiently screen and design hexapeptide inhibitors against amyloid-β (Aβ) aggregation and toxicity from the first principle. Computationally screened/designed inhibitors are then validated for their inhibition activity using biophysical experiments. We propose and demonstrate a proof-of-concept of the “like-interacts-like” design principle that the self-assembling peptides are able to interact strongly with conformationally similar motifs of Aβ peptides and to competitively reduce Aβ–Aβ interactions, thus preventing Aβ aggregation and Aβ-induced toxicity. Such a de novo design can also be generally applicable to design new peptide inhibitors against other amyloid diseases, beyond traditional peptide inhibitors with homologous sequences to parent amyloid peptides.
ISSN:1948-7193
1948-7193
DOI:10.1021/cn500165s