Degradation of Alzheimer’s Amyloid-β by a Catalytically Inactive Insulin-Degrading Enzyme

[Display omitted] •Degradation of Aβ by E111Q-IDE via a non-chaperonin mechanism is demonstrated.•Zinc binding to Aβ was found to form aggregates that do not fit to the IDE’s catalytic cavity.•Zinc binding to Aβ inactivates E111Q-IDE’s catalytic function, whereas zinc removal restores its function.•...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of molecular biology 2021-06, Vol.433 (13), p.166993-166993, Article 166993
Hauptverfasser: Sahoo, Bikash R., Panda, Pritam Kumar, Liang, Wenguang, Tang, Wei-Jen, Ahuja, Rajeev, Ramamoorthy, Ayyalusamy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Degradation of Aβ by E111Q-IDE via a non-chaperonin mechanism is demonstrated.•Zinc binding to Aβ was found to form aggregates that do not fit to the IDE’s catalytic cavity.•Zinc binding to Aβ inactivates E111Q-IDE’s catalytic function, whereas zinc removal restores its function.•E111Q-IDE presented a reduced activity on Aβ aggregation kinetics when compared with the wild-type IDE. It is known that insulin-degrading-enzyme (IDE) plays a crucial role in the clearance of Alzheimer’s amyloid-β (Aβ). The cysteine-free IDE mutant (cf-E111Q-IDE) is catalytically inactive against insulin, but its effect on Aβ degradation is unknown that would help in the allosteric modulation of the enzyme activity. Herein, the degradation of Aβ(1–40) by cf-E111Q-IDE via a non-chaperone mechanism is demonstrated by NMR and LC-MS, and the aggregation of fragmented peptides is characterized using fluorescence and electron microscopy. cf-E111Q-IDE presented a reduced effect on the aggregation kinetics of Aβ(1–40) when compared with the wild-type IDE. Whereas LC-MS and diffusion ordered NMR spectroscopy revealed the generation of Aβ fragments by both wild-type and cf-E111Q-IDE. The aggregation propensities and the difference in the morphological phenotype of the full-length Aβ(1–40) and its fragments are explained using multi-microseconds molecular dynamics simulations. Notably, our results reveal that zinc binding to Aβ(1–40) inactivates cf-E111Q-IDE’s catalytic function, whereas zinc removal restores its function as evidenced from high-speed AFM, electron microscopy, chromatography, and NMR results. These findings emphasize the catalytic role of cf-E111Q-IDE on Aβ degradation and urge the development of zinc chelators as an alternative therapeutic strategy that switches on/off IDE’s function.
ISSN:0022-2836
1089-8638
1089-8638
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2021.166993