Repurposing Triphenylmethane Dyes to Bind to Trimers Derived from Aβ

  • Patrick J. Salveson
  • , Sepehr Haerianardakani
  • , Alexander Thuy-Boun
  • , Stan Yoo
  • , Adam G. Kreutzer
  • , Borries Demeler
  • , James S. Nowick

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

40 Scopus citations

Abstract

Soluble oligomers of the β-amyloid peptide, Aβ, are associated with the progression of Alzheimer's disease. Although many small molecules bind to these assemblies, the details of how these molecules interact with Aβ oligomers remain unknown. This paper reports that crystal violet, and other C3 symmetric triphenylmethane dyes, bind to C3 symmetric trimers derived from Aβ17-36. Binding changes the color of the dyes from purple to blue, and causes them to fluoresce red when irradiated with green light. Job plot and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments reveal that two trimers complex with one dye molecule. Studies with several triphenylmethane dyes reveal that three N,N-dialkylamino substituents are required for complexation. Several mutant trimers, in which Phe19, Phe20, and Ile31 were mutated to cyclohexylalanine, valine, and cyclohexylglycine, were prepared to probe the triphenylmethane dye binding site. Size exclusion chromatography, SDS-PAGE, and X-ray crystallographic studies demonstrate that these mutations do not impact the structure or assembly of the triangular trimer. Fluorescence spectroscopy and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments reveal that the dye packs against an aromatic surface formed by the Phe20 side chains and is clasped by the Ile31 side chains. Docking and molecular modeling provide a working model of the complex in which the triphenylmethane dye is sandwiched between two triangular trimers. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that the X-ray crystallographic structures of triangular trimers derived from Aβ can be used to guide the discovery of ligands that bind to soluble oligomers derived from Aβ.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)11745-11754
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume140
Issue number37
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 19 2018

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health GM097562 and the National Science Foundation CHE- 1507840 and CHE-1808096. The authors thank the Laser Spectroscopy Facility at University of California, Irvine for assistance with fluorescence measurements. The development of UltraScan was supported by NIH grant GM120600 and NSF grant NSF-ACI-1339649. Supercomputer calculations were performed on Comet at the San Diego Supercomputing Center, supported through NSF/XSEDE grant TGMCB070039N, and on Lonestar-5 at the Texas Advanced Computing Center, supported through UT grant TG457201. We also acknowledge the support of the San Antonio Cancer Institute grant P30 CA054174 for support of the Center for Analytical Ultracentrifugation of Macromolecular Assemblies at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. P.J.S. thanks the UCI Training Program in Chemical and Structural Biology T32 GM108561 for training grant support as well as ARCS Foundation Orange County for additional support.

FundersFunder number
TGMCB070039N
P30 CA054174
T32 GM108561
CHE-1808096, CHE- 1507840
NSF-ACI-1339649, GM120600
R01GM097562
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
University of TampaTG457201

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