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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Hoyer W, Grönwall C, Jonsson A, Ståhl S, Härd T. Stabilization of a beta-hairpin in monomeric Alzheimer's amyloid-beta peptide inhibits amyloid formation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Apr 1;105(13):5099-104. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Affibodies—Putting the β in Aβ?

Comment by:  Chris Dealwis
Submitted 20 March 2008  |  Permalink Posted 20 March 2008

Hoyer and coworkers have solved a structure of the amyloid-β peptide in complex with a phage-display selected affibody using NMR spectroscopy. The affibody is responsible for stabilizing the Aβ monomer by inhibiting fibril formation. The Aβ adopts a parallel β-hairpin structure, where the two β-strands consisting of residues 15-22 (strand A) and 30-36 (strand B) form intramolecular hydrogen bonds between each other. Strand A is stabilized by a short strand from the affibody which runs anti-parallel, while strand B is stabilized by a short strand that is parallel to it.

From a large body of data, we know that fibrils exhibit a “cross-β” pattern in x-ray fiber diffraction (1). This is associated with a fundamental structure consisting of extended β-sheet networks in which peptide chains are displayed perpendicular to the fibril axis, while the hydrogen bonding direction of the sheet is parallel to the fibril axis (2,3). Hence, the direction of the hydrogen bonds of a conventional β-hairpin as observed in the current study will not fit the bill.

The authors acknowledge...  Read more


  Primary News: Affibodies—Putting the β in Aβ?

Comment by:  Brigita Urbanc, ARF Advisor
Submitted 9 April 2008  |  Permalink Posted 9 April 2008

Capturing Aβ Using Engineered Affinity Proteins
Alzheimer disease (AD) is associated with the amyloid-β protein (Aβ) which assembles into toxic oligomers, protofibrils, and fibrils, and is the major component of amyloid plaques in the AD brain. Substantial evidence implicates the early stages of Aβ assembly in the onset of the disease. Many different strategies that aim at preventing Aβ molecules from formation of toxic assemblies are currently under investigation.

The present study by Hoyer et al. was motivated by novel therapeutic strategies that explore ways to create a peripheral sink mechanism by administering an Aβ binding molecule, a ligand, with the capacity to reduce Aβ in the central nervous system by channeling it into the plasma. As the Aβ1-40 binding molecule, Hoyer et al. proposed to apply an engineered affinity protein (affibody), ZAβ3, based on the Z domain derived from the staphylococcal protein A. In their paper, Hoyer et al. presented 16 different ligands which were previously shown to bind both Aβ1-40 and Aβ1-42 and to form dimers through the...  Read more


  Comment by:  Gabriela Crespi, Luke Miles, Michael Parker
Submitted 24 April 2008  |  Permalink Posted 25 April 2008
  I recommend this paper

Grönwall et al. (2007) recently applied phage-display techniques to identify affibody ligands that efficiently capture Aβ peptides from human plasma and serum. In the present paper by Hoyer et al., one of these phage-selected affibodies, Zab3, is shown to form a disulfide cross-linked dimer that binds monomeric Aβ(1-40) with low nanomolar affinity as determined by isothermal titration calorimetry. In addition, Hoyer et al. used thioflavin T fluorescence to show that the Zab3 dimer completely inhibits Aβ(1-40) fibrillization at stoichiometric concentrations to the Aβ monomer.

As such, Zab3 represents a novel lead molecule for the development of therapeutics to promote amyloid plaque clearance in vivo according to the peripheral sink mechanism of amyloid dissolution. However, the necessity for a disulfide-linked dimer to bind the peptide may limit its development potential. Although the affibody shows promise in inhibiting fibrils, no data were presented as to whether it can break up fibrils once formed or break up Aβ oligomers...  Read more


  Comment by:  George Perry, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 16 May 2008  |  Permalink Posted 16 May 2008
  I recommend this paper
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