Using a nuclear magnetic resonance technique, University of Illinois at Chicago
chemists have obtained the first molecular-level images of precursors of bundled
fibrils that form the brain plaques seen in Alzheimer's disease.
Untangling the molecular structure of these pre-fibril
forms, which may be the key neurotoxins in Alzheimer's,
may help identify targets for new drugs to combat
many neurodegenerative diseases.
Microscopic bundled fibrils made of proteins called
amyloid-beta are presumed to be the toxic culprits
in the senile plaques found in the brain with Alzheimer's.
But there is increasing evidence that even smaller
assemblies of amyloid-beta found prior to formation
of pre-fibrils are the real nerve-killers. Scientists
have been frustrated that electron microscope images
of these nanometer-scale spherical assemblies have
failed to reveal any distinct molecular structure.
Yoshitaka Ishii, assistant professor of chemistry
at UIC, and graduate student Sandra Chimon have now
determined this structure using a methodology developed
with high-resolution solid-state nuclear magnetic
resonance, or SSNMR. Details were reported in a Communication
article last month in JACS, the Journal of the American
Chemical Society.
"This is the first case showing that these intermediate
species, the smaller assemblies, have a well-defined
structure," said Ishii, who conducted a two-year
search to map the structure of the pre-fibril assemblies,
then spent another year confirming his findings.
Ishii's technique uses what is called time-resolution
SSNMR to view nanoscale spectral images of this chemical
formation.
Thioflavin, a dye commonly used to stain amyloid
senile plaques, is applied to detect formation of
the intermediate assemblies in florescence. The intermediate
sample is then frozen to capture quickly changing
spectral images of the molecules before they can
self-assemble into fibril-forming sheets.
The resulting SSNMR "snapshots" provide a structural
diagram for finding molecular binding targets that
may stop proteins from misfolding, which may stop
Alzheimer's disease from developing.
"We're interested in how the molecules assemble
in this shape, and eventually into fibrils," Ishii
said. "We wanted to find out what kind of structure
each amino acid takes in a certain site of a protein
at the atomic level. It gives us an idea of how these
molecules interact with each other to make this structure."
Ishii said the SSNMR technique may be used to study
small chemical subunits involved in diseases such
as Parkinson's and prion diseases like mad cow or
Creutzfeld-Jacob, to name just some of the 20 or
so neurodegenerative diseases characterized by misfolding
proteins.
"You want to design molecules that will interact
and prevent this," said Ishii. "That's been difficult.
Now we have a new clue to learn how."
Ishii's research work was supported by the Alzheimer's
Association and the National Science Foundation.
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