Selective and stoichiometric incorporation of ATP by self-assembling amyloid fibrils.

06 July 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

ATP acts as a biological hydrotrope preventing protein aggregation. Here, we report a novel chimeric peptide, ACC1-13K8, with an unusual capacity to bind and incorporate ATP while self-assembling into amyloid fibrils. The amino acid sequence combines highly amyloidogenic segment of insulin’s A-chain (ACC1-13) and octalysine (K8). Fibrillization requires binding 2 ATP molecules per ACC1-13K8 monomer and is not triggered by adenosine di- and monophosphates (ADP, AMP). Infrared and CD spectra and AFM-based morphological analysis reveal tight and orderly entrapment of ATP within superstructural hybrid peptide-ATP fibrils. The incorporation of ATP is an emergent property of ACC1-13K8 not observed for ACC1-13 and K8 segments separately. We demonstrate how new functionalities (e.g. ATP storage) emerge from synergistic coupling of amyloidogenic segments with non-amyloidogenic peptide ligands, and suggest that ATP’s role in protein misfolding is more nuanced than previously assumed.

Keywords

Amyloid
encapsulation
nucleotide
hybrid nanostructure

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Supporting Information
Description
Experimental details; additional time-lapse AFM data; MD-based structural visualization; MD-study of ACC1-13K8-ATP stability.
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