RESUMO
Amyloidosis is known to be caused by the deposition of amyloid fibrils into various biological tissues; effective treatments for the disease are little established today. An infrared free-electron laser (IR-FEL) is an accelerator-based picosecond-pulse laser having tunable infrared wavelengths. In the current study, the irradiation effect of an IR-FEL was tested on an 11-residue peptide (NFLNCYVSGFH) fibril from ß2-microglobulin (ß2M) with the aim of applying IR-FELs to amyloidosis therapy. Infrared microspectroscopy (IRM) and scanning electron microscopy showed that a fibril of ß2M peptide was clearly dissociated by IR-FEL at 6.1â µm (amideâ I) accompanied by a decrease of the ß-sheet and an increase of the α-helix. No dissociative process was recognized at 6.5â µm (amideâ II) as well as at 5.0â µm (non-specific wavelength). Equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the α-helix can exist stably and the probability of forming interchain hydrogen bonds associated with the internal asparagine residue (N4) is notably reduced compared with other amino acids after the ß-sheet is dissociated by amideâ I specific irradiation. This result implies that N4 plays a key role for recombination of hydrogen bonds in the dissociation of the ß2M fibril. In addition, the ß-sheet was disrupted at temperatures higher than 340â K while the α-helix did not appear even though the fibril was heated up to 363â K as revealed by IRM. The current study gives solid evidence for the laser-mediated conversion from ß-sheet to α-helix in amyloid fibrils at the molecular level.