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In systemic amyloidosis, Serum amyloid A (SAA) fibril deposits cause widespread damages to tissues and organs that eventually may lead to death. A therapeutically intervention therefore has either to dissolve these fibrils or inhibit their formation. However, only recently has the human SAA fibril structure be resolved at a resolution that is sufficient for development of drug candidates. Here, we use molecular dynamic simulations to probe the factors that modulate the stability of this fibril model. Our simulations suggest that fibril formation starts with the stacking of two misfolded monomers into metastable dimers, with the stacking depending on the N-terminal amyloidogenic regions of different chains forming anchors. The resulting dimers pack in a second step into a two-fold two-layer tetramer that is stable enough to nucleate fibril formation. The stability of the initial dimers is enhanced under acidic conditions by a strong salt bridge and side-chain hydrogen bond network in the C-terminal cavity (residues 23 - 51) but not affected by the presence of the disordered C-terminal tail. Table of Content Graphics
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?:doi
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?:doi
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10.1101/2020.09.10.291948
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document_parses/pdf_json/a7386252bfffc9fc85eac6bd020e91100fd40084.json
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Stability of Human Serum Amyloid A Fibrils
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