Affiliation:
1. Department of Biotechnology and Medical Engineering, National Institute of Technology Rourkela, Odisha, India
Abstract
Aims:
Alzheimer's disease is a neurodegenerative disease for which no cure is available.
The presence of amyloid plaques in the extracellular space of neural cells is the key feature of
this fatal disease.
Background:
The proteolysis of Amyloid Precursor Protein by presenilin leads to the formation of
Amyloid-beta peptides (Aβ 42/40). Deposition of 42 residual Aβ peptides forms fibril’s structure,
disrupting neuron synaptic transmission, inducing neural cell toxicity, and ultimately leading to
neuron death.
Objective:
Various novel peptides have been investigated via molecular docking and molecular
dynamic simulation studies to investigate their effects on Aβ amyloidogenesis.
Methods:
The sequence-based peptides were rationally designed and investigated for their interaction
with Aβ42 monomer and fibril, and their influence on the structural stability of target proteins
was studied.
Results:
Analyzed docking results suggest that the peptide YRIGY (P6) has the highest binding
affinity with Aβ42 fibril amongst all the synthetic peptides, and the peptide DKAPFF (P12) similarly
shows a better binding with the Aβ42 monomer. Moreover, simulation results also suggest
that the higher the binding affinity, the better the inhibitory action.
Conclusion:
These findings indicate that both the rationally designed peptides can modulate amyloidogenesis,
but peptide (P6) has better potential for the disaggregation of the fibrils. In contrast,
peptide P12 stabilizes the native structure of the Aβ42 monomer more effectively and hence can
serve as a potential amyloid inhibitor. Thus, these peptides can be explored as therapeutic agents
against Alzheimer's disease. Experimental testing of these peptides for immunogenicity, stability
in cellular conditions, toxic effects and membrane permeability can be the future research scope of
this study.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Molecular Medicine,General Medicine