Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.121, No.6, 1211-1221, 2017
Identification of Binding Modes for Amino Naphthalene 2-Cyanoacrylate (ANCA) Probes to Amyloid Fibrils from Molecular Dynamics Simulations
The amino naphthalene 2-cyanoacrylate (ANCA) probe is a kind of fluorescent amyloid binding probe that can report different fluorescence emissions when bound to various amyloid deposits in tissue, while their interactions with amyloid fibrils remain unclear due to the insoluble nature of amyloid fibrils. Here, all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, were used to investigate the interaction between ANCA probes with three different amyloid fibrils. Two common binding modes of ANCA probes on A ss 40 amyloid fibrils were identified by cluster analysis of multiple simulations, The van der Waals and electrostatic interactions were found to be major driving forces for the binding. Atomic contacts analysis and binding free energy decomposition results suggested that the hydrophobic part of ANCA mainly interacts with aromatic side chains on the fibril surface and the hydrophilic part mainly interacts with positive charged residues in the ss-sheet region. By comparing the binding modes with different fibrils, we can find that ANCA adopts different conformations while interacting with residues of different hydrophobicity, aromaticity, and electrochemical properties in the ss-sheet region, which accounts for its selective mechanism toward different amyloid fibrils.