Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disease, and there are no mechanism-based therapies. AD is defined by the presence of abundant neurofibrillary lesions and neuritic plaques in cerebral cortex. Neurofibrillary lesions are made of paired helical and straight Tau filaments (PHFs and SFs), whereas Tau filaments with different morphologies characterize other neurodegenerative diseases. No high-resolution structures of Tau filaments are available. Here we present cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) maps at 3.4–3.5 Å resolution and corresponding atomic models of PHFs and SFs from AD brain. Filament cores are made of two identical protofilaments comprising residues 306–378 of Tau, which adopt a combined cross-β/β-helix structure and define the seed for Tau aggregation. PHFs and SFs differ in their inter-protofilament packing, showing that they are ultrastructural polymorphs. These findings demonstrate that cryo-EM allows atomic characterization of amyloid filaments from patient-derived material, and pave the way to study a range of neurodegenerative diseases.
Protein molecules have the ability to form a rich variety of natural and artificial structures and materials. We show that amyloid fibrils, ordered supramolecular nanostructures that are self-assembled from a wide range of polypeptide molecules, have rigidities varying over four orders of magnitude, and constitute a class of high-performance biomaterials. We elucidate the molecular origin of fibril material properties and show that the major contribution to their rigidity stems from a generic interbackbone hydrogen-bonding network that is modulated by variable side-chain interactions.
The cross-β amyloid form of peptides and proteins represents an archetypal and widely accessible structure consisting of ordered arrays of β-sheet filaments. These complex aggregates have remarkable chemical and physical properties, and the conversion of normally soluble functional forms of proteins into amyloid structures is linked to many debilitating human diseases, including several common forms of age-related dementia. Despite their importance, however, cross-β amyloid fibrils have proved to be recalcitrant to detailed structural analysis. By combining structural constraints from a series of experimental techniques spanning five orders of magnitude in length scale-including magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, X-ray fiber diffraction, cryoelectron microscopy, scanning transmission electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy-we report the atomic-resolution (0.5 Å) structures of three amyloid polymorphs formed by an 11-residue peptide. These structures reveal the details of the packing interactions by which the constituent β-strands are assembled hierarchically into protofilaments, filaments, and mature fibrils. It is well established that a wide variety of peptides or proteins without any evident sequence similarity can self-assemble into amyloid fibrils (1, 2). These structures have many common characteristics, typically being 100-200 Å in diameter and containing a universal "cross-β" core structure composed of arrays of β-sheets running parallel to the long axis of the fibrils (3). These fibrillar states are highly ordered, with persistence lengths of the order of microns (4) and mechanical properties comparable to those of steel and dragline silk, and much greater than those typical of biological filaments such as actin and microtubules (5). Amyloid fibrils can also possess very high kinetic and thermodynamic stabilities, often exceeding those of the functional folded states of proteins (6), as well as a greater resistance to degradation by chemical or biological means (7). Several functional forms of proteins that exploit these properties have been observed in biological systems (8). More generally, however, the conversion of normally soluble functional proteins into the amyloid state is associated with many debilitating human disorders, ranging from Alzheimer's disease to type II diabetes (1, 9). Our understanding of the nature of this type of filamentous aggregate has greatly improved in recent years (3,(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19), particularly through the structural determination of their elementary β-strand building blocks (20) and the characterization of their assembly into cross-β steric zippers (21,22). However, a thorough understanding of the hierarchical assembly of these individual structural elements into fully-formed fibrils, which display polymorphism but possess a range of generic features (23), has so far been limited by the absence of a complete atomicresolution cross-β amyloid structures (2).We report here the simultaneous determination of the a...
An experimental determination of the thermodynamic stabilities of a series of amyloid fibrils reveals that this structural form is likely to be the most stable one that protein molecules can adopt even under physiological conditions. This result challenges the conventional assumption that functional forms of proteins correspond to the global minima in their free energy surfaces and suggests that living systems are conformationally as well as chemically metastable.
Tau aggregation into insoluble filaments is the defining pathological hallmark of tauopathies. However, it is not known what controls the formation and templated seeding of strain-specific structures associated with individual tauopathies. Here, we use cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) to determine the structures of tau filaments from corticobasal degeneration (CBD) human brain tissue. Cryo-EM and mass spectrometry of tau filaments from CBD reveal that this conformer is heavily decorated with posttranslational modifications (PTMs), enabling us to map PTMs directly onto the structures. By comparing the structures and PTMs of tau filaments from CBD and Alzheimer's disease, it is found that ubiquitination of tau can mediate interprotofilament interfaces. We propose a structurebased model in which cross-talk between PTMs influences tau filament structure, contributing to the structural diversity of tauopathy strains. Our approach establishes a framework for further elucidating the relationship between the structures of polymorphic fibrils, including their PTMs, and neurodegenerative disease.
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