Perturbation of cell membranes by amyloid β (Ab) peptide oligomers is one possible mechanism of cytotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease, but the structure of such Ab-membrane complexes is unknown. Here we examine the stability of several putative structures by implicit membrane and all-atom molecular dynamics simulations. The structures include (a) a variety of models proposed by other researchers in the past, (b) a heptameric β barrel determined by grafting the Ab sequence onto α-hemolysin, (c) a similar structure with modified strand orientation and turn location based on an experimental β-hairpin structure, (d) oligomers inserting C-terminal β hairpins into one leaflet of the bilayer, (e) oligomers forming parallel C-terminal β barrels, and (f) a helical hexamer made of C-terminal fragments. The α-hemolysin-grafted structure and its alternately oriented variant are stable in the membrane and form an aqueous pore. In contrast, the C-terminal parallel barrels are not stable, presumably due to excessive hydrophobicity of their inner surface. The helical hexamer also failed to stabilize an aqueous pore for the same reason. The C-terminal hairpin-inserting structures remain stably inserted but, again, do not form an aqueous pore. Our results suggest that only β-barrels inserting a combination of C-terminal and other residues can form stable aqueous pores.
Keywords: Alzheimer’s; Amyloid; ion channels; lipid bilayer; molecular dynamics; β-barrel.