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Ben-Tai, Nir (Ed.)Abstract Peptide selfâassembly into amyloid fibrils provides numerous applications in drug delivery and biomedical engineering applications. We augment our previouslyâestablished computational screening technique along with experimental biophysical characterization to discover 7âmer peptides that selfâassemble into âparallelβâsheetsâ, that is,βâsheets with NâterminusâtoâCâterminus đ˝âstrand vectors oriented in parallel. To accomplish the desiredβâstrand organization, we applied thePepADamino acid sequence design software to the Classâ1 crossâβspine defined by Sawaya et al. This molecular configuration includes two layers of parallelβâsheets stacked such that NâterminusâtoâCâterminus vectors are oriented antiparallel for molecules on adjacentβâsheets. The first cohort ofPepADidentified peptides were examined for their fibrillation behavior in DMD/PRIME20 simulations, and the top performing sequence was selected as a prototype for a subsequent round of sequence refinement. The two rounds of design resulted in a library of eight 7âmer peptides. In DMD/PRIME20 simulations, five of these peptides spontaneously formed fibrilâlike structures with a predominantly parallel đ˝âsheet arrangement, two formed fibrilâlike structure with <50% in parallel đ˝âsheet arrangement and one remained a random coil. Among the eight candidate peptides produced by PepAD and DMD/PRIME20, five were synthesized and purified. All five assembled into amyloid fibrils composed of parallelβâsheets based on Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, circular dichroism, electron microscopy, and thioflavinâT fluorescence spectroscopy measurements.more » « less
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Abstract Screening amino acid sequence space via experiments to discover peptides that self-assemble into amyloid fibrils is challenging. We have developed a computational peptide assembly design (PepAD) algorithm that enables the discovery of amyloid-forming peptides. Discontinuous molecular dynamics (DMD) simulation with the PRIME20 force field combined with the FoldAmyloid tool is used to examine the fibrilization kinetics of PepAD-generated peptides. PepAD screening of âź10,000 7-mer peptides resulted in twelve top-scoring peptides with two distinct hydration properties. Our studies revealed that eight of the twelve in silico discovered peptides spontaneously form amyloid fibrils in the DMD simulations and that all eight have at least five residues that the FoldAmyloid tool classifies as being aggregation-prone. Based on these observations, we re-examined the PepAD-generated peptides in the sequence pool returned by PepAD and extracted five sequence patterns as well as associated sequence signatures for the 7-mer amyloid-forming peptides. Experimental results from Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thioflavin T (ThT) fluorescence, circular dichroism (CD), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) indicate that all the peptides predicted to assemble in silico assemble into antiparallel β-sheet nanofibers in a concentration-dependent manner. This is the first attempt to use a computational approach to search for amyloid-forming peptides based on customized settings. Our efforts facilitate the identification of β-sheet-based self-assembling peptides, and contribute insights towards answering a fundamental scientific question: âWhat does it take, sequence-wise, for a peptide to self-assemble?âmore » « less
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