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Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of autocatalytic protein aggregationEden-Jones, Kym Denys January 2014 (has links)
The self-assembly of proteins into filamentous structures underpins many aspects of biology, from dynamic cell scaffolding proteins such as actin, to the amyloid plaques responsible for a number of degenerative diseases. Typically, these self-assembly processes have been treated as nucleated, reversible polymerisation reactions, where dynamic fluctuations in a population of monomers eventually overcome an energy barrier, forming a stable aggregate that can then grow and shrink by the addition and loss of more protein from its ends. The nucleated, reversible polymerisation framework is very successful in describing a variety of protein systems such as the cell scaffolds actin and tubulin, and the aggregation of haemoglobin. Historically, amyloid fibrils were also thought to be described by this model, but measurements of their aggregation kinetics failed to match the model's predictions. Instead, recent work indicates that autocatalytic polymerisation - a process by which the number of growth competent species is increased through secondary nucleation, in proportion to the amount already present - is better at describing their formation. In this thesis, I will extend the predictions made in this mean-field, autocatalytic polymerisation model through use of kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. The ubiquitous sigmoid-like growth curve of amyloid fibril formation often possesses a notable quiescent lag phase which has been variously attributed to primary and secondary nucleation processes. Substantial variability in the length of this lag phase is often seen in replicate experimental growth curves, and naively may be attributed to fluctuations in one or both of these nucleation processes. By comparing analytic waiting-time distributions, to those produced by kinetic Monte Carlo simulation of the processes thought to be involved, I will demonstrate that this cannot be the case in sample volumes comparable with typical laboratory experiments. Experimentally, the length of the lag phase, or "lag time", is often found to scale with the total protein concentration, according to a power law with exponent γ. The models of nucleated polymerisation and autocatalytic polymerisation predict different values for this scaling exponent, and these are sometimes used to identify which of the models best describes a given protein system. I show that this approach is likely to result in a misidentification of the dominant mechanisms under conditions where the lag phase is dominated by a different process to the rest of the growth curve. Furthermore, I demonstrate that a change of the dominant mechanism associated with total protein concentration will produce "kinks" in the scaling of lag time with total protein concentration, and that these may be used to greater effect in identifying the dominant mechanisms from experimental kinetic data. Experimental data for bovine insulin aggregation, which is well described by the autocatalytic polymerisation model for low total protein concentrations, displays an intriguing departure from the predicted behaviour at higher protein concentrations. Additionally, the protein concentration at which the transition occurs, appears to be affected by the presence of salt. Coincident with this, an apparent change in the fibril structure indicates that different aggregation mechanisms may operate at different total protein concentrations. I demonstrate that a transition whereby the self-assembly mechanisms change once a critical concentration of fibrils or fibrillar protein is reached, can explain the observed behaviour and that this predicts a substantially higher abundance of shorter laments - which are thought to be pathogenic - at lower total protein concentrations than if self-assembly were consistently autocatalytic at all protein concentration. Amyloid-like loops have been observed in electron and atomic-force microscographs, together with non-looped fibrils, for a number of different proteins including ovalbumin. This implies that fibrils formed of these proteins are able to grow by fibrillar end-joining, and not only monomer addition as is more commonly assumed. I develop a simple analytic expression for polymerisation by monomer addition and fibrillar end-joining, (without autocatalysis) and show that this is not sufficient to explain the growth curves obtained experimentally for ovalbumin. I then demonstrate that the same data can be explained by combining fibrillar end-joining and fragmentation. Through the use of an analytic expression, I estimate the kinetic rates from the experimental growth curves and, via simulation, investigate the distribution of lament and loop lengths. Together, my findings demonstrate the relative importance of different molecular mechanisms in amyloid fibril formation, how these might be affected by various environmental parameters, and characteristic behaviour by which their involvement might be detected experimentally.
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Exploring the mechanisms of fibrillar protein aggregationRyan, Morris January 2013 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to investigate and better understand the mechanisms of protein self-assembly. Specifically, I study three protein systems which form morphologically and structurally distinct brillar protein aggregates. The first of these studies is concerned with the self-assembly of amyloid brils formed from bovine insulin. Amyloid brils are associated with human diseases such as Alzheimers Disease and type-2 diabetes, and are also garnering interest in biomaterial applications. Fragmentation-dominated models for the self-assembly of amyloid brils have had important successes in explaining the kinetics of amyloid bril formation but predict bril length distributions that do not match experimental observations. Here I resolve this inconsistency using a combination of experimental kinetic measurements and computer simulations. I provide evidence for a structural transition demarcated by a critical bril mass concentration, or CFC, above which fragmentation of the brils is suppressed. Our simulations predict the formation of distinct bril length distributions above and below the CFC, which I confirm by electron microscopy. These results point to a new picture of amyloid bril growth in which structural transitions that occur during self-assembly have strong effects on the final population of aggregate species with small, and potentially cytotoxic, oligomers dominating for long periods of time at protein concentrations below the CFC. I further show that the CFC can be modulated by environmental conditions, pointing to possible in vivo strategies for controlling cytotoxicity. I probe the structural nature of the transition by performing small angle neutron scattering. Secondly, I study the formation of amyloid-like brils from the protein ovalbumin. I undertake kinetic experiments of self-assembly and find two key features emerge: the lack of a lag time and the existence of a slow growth regime in the long-time limit. I observe, using TEM, that these brils are worm-like in nature and form closed-loops. I find the growth kinetics are intimately connected to this particular morphology. I present a simple kinetic model which captures the features of the kinetics found in experiments by incorporating end-to-end association of brils. I comment on the ramifications this type of amyloid bril assembly may have on oligomeric toxicity. Thirdly, the DNA-mimic protein ocr is highly charged (-56e at pH 8) and forms non-amyloid brillar assemblies at very high ammonium sulphate concentrations (3.2M). The fact that ocr forms translucent brillar gels at such high salt concentrations is extremely unique. Typically under such high salt conditions, non-specific amorphous aggregates are formed. In order to better understand the mechanism of why ocr forms specific bril aggregates, I used variants of the wile-type protein in which extensive regions of surface have been removed or modified. The structural characteristics of gels formed from the variants were probed using microrheological techniques. I find that non-specific electrostatic charge screening plays an important role in ocr aggregation. However, I also locate a potentially important α-helical region which may play a part in establishing specific interactions so that ocr may form ordered brillar assemblies.
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An investigation of the behavioral and neurochemical changes followingthe administration of ibotenic acid, 192IgG-saporin or B-amyloid (1-40) into the rat brain: possible animalmodels for Alfheimer's diseaseNag, Subodh. January 2001 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Physiology / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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The influence of the deletion and overexpression of APP in transgenic mice on the morphology of the dentate gyrusKendal, Claire January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Herpes simplex virus vectors for gene delivery to the CNS : applications in the study of Alzheimer's diseaseLilley, Caroline Elizabeth January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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An immunohistochemical study of the cortex in Alzheimers's diseaseBielby-Clarke, Keren Elizabeth January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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The replication kinetics of prions and other amyloidsMasel, Joanna January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Elucidating the early events of protein aggregation using biophysical techniquesCole, Harriet Lucy January 2013 (has links)
Proteins and peptides can convert from their native form into insoluble highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, known as amyloid fibrils. The process of fibrillogenesis is implicated in the pathogenic mechanisms of many diseases and, although mature fibrils are well characterised by a plethora of biophysical techniques, the initiation and early steps remain, to date, ambiguous. Mass spectrometry can provide invaluable insights into these early events as it can identify the low populated and transient oligomeric species present in the lag phase by their mass to charge ratio. Recent evidence has shown that oligomers formed early in the aggregation process are cytotoxic and may additionally be central to the progression of diseases associated with amyloid fibril presence. The hybrid technique of ion mobility mass spectrometry can be employed to provide conformational details of monomeric and multimeric species present and elucidate the presence of oligomers which possess coincident mass to charge ratios. Molecular modelling, in conjunction with experimental results, can suggest probable monomeric and oligomeric structural arrangements. In this thesis three aggregating systems are investigated: amyloidogenic transthyretin fragment (105-115), insulin and two Aβ peptides. Initially amyloidogenic endecapeptide transthyretin (105-115) is studied as it has been widely utilised as a model system for investigating amyloid formation due to its small size. Secondly insulin, a key hormone in metabolic processes, is investigated as extensive research has been carried out into its aggregation into amyloid fibrils. The formation of insulin amyloid fibrils rarely occurs in vivo; however localised amyloidosis at the site of injection and the aggregation of pharmaceutical insulin stocks present problems. Thirdly the aggregation of A β peptides Aβ (1-40) and Aβ (1-42) and their interactions with an aggregation inhibitor, RI-OR2, are characterised. A (1-42), although less commonly produced in vivo, is more cytotoxic and has a faster aggregation mechanism than Aβ (1-40). Both Aβ peptides are implicated in the aetiology of Alzheimer’s disease whilst RI-OR2 has been reported to prevent the production of high molecular weight oligomers, with particular suppression of Aβ (1-42) aggregation.
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Theory and simulation of amyloid aggregation process: sequence effects and defectsGhanati, Elaheh January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Physics / Jeremy Schmit / In this work, we present a model for the kinetics of amyloid fibril aggregation. In the model we mapped the process of Hydrogen bond (H-bond) formation and breakage to a random-walk. we captured the effect of side chains using position dependent H-bonds free energies which allows us to calculated the residence time for different binding alignments with the fibril. The residence time can be compared to the diffusion-limited attachment rate to give net aggregation stability. This stability increases exponentially with increasing number of bonds or binding energy in homopolymer chains, however for chains with patterned sequences, the residence time shows strong effects of the binding alignment. Using the residence time for uniform structures combined with estimate of the diffusion rate, we modeled and simulated the kinetics of amyloid aggregation. Results of the simulations gives the bond energies and concentrations required for the onset of growth of aggregates.
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Probing the role of the 37kDa/67kDa laminin receptor in amyloid beta mediated pathogenesis in alzheimer's diseaseDias, Bianca Da Costa 23 September 2014 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Johannesburg, 2014. / Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is characterized by neurofibrillary tangles, senile plaques and
neuronal loss. Although the mechanisms underlying Amyloid beta 42 (Aβ42) neurotoxicity
have not been firmly established, it is proposed that the neuronal loss is elicited through
associations with cell surface receptors. The cellular prion protein (PrPc) has been identified
as an Aβ42 receptor and as a regulator of the amyloidogenic cleavage pathway. As Aβ42
shares common binding partners with the 37kDa/67kDa laminin receptor (LRP/LR),
including PrPc, we investigated whether these proteins interact and assessed the pathological
significance of this association. LRP/LR was found to co-localize with Aβ on the cell surface.
The occurrence of FRET suggested that an interaction between LRP/LR and Aβ indeed exists
at the cell surface. Furthermore, pull down assays and Aβ-specific ELISAs demonstrated that
LRP/LR forms a physical association with endogenously shed Aβ, thereby verifying the
physiological relevance of this association. Antibody blockade by IgG1-iS18 and shRNAmediated
downregulation of LRP/LR significantly enhanced cell viability and proliferation
and decreased apoptosis in cells co-treated with Aβ42 when compared to cells incubated with
Aβ42 alone. In addition, antibody blockade and shRNA-mediated downregulation of LRP/LR
significantly impeded Aβ42 internalization. These results suggest that LRP/LR acts as an
internalization receptor for Aβ42 and may thereby contribute to the cytotoxicity of the
neuropeptide by facilitating intracellular Aβ42 accumulation and aggregation - which has
consequences for cell proliferation and may promote apoptosis. These findings recommend
anti-LRP/LR specific antibodies and shRNAs as potential therapeutic tools for Alzheimer’s
Disease treatment.
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