Mapping the Structural Landscape of Amyloid Fibrils to Guide Polymorph-Specific Therapeutics

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Abstract

Amyloid fibrils are pathological hallmarks of neurodegenerative diseases and central contributors to their progression, representing promising targets for disease-modifying interventions. However, limited access to patient-derived fibrils and the inability to reproduce pathological folds in vitro hinder the development of fibril-specific ligands. Here, we present FibrilSite, a computational pipeline that identifies geometric and physicochemical similarities across fibril surfaces and demonstrate its utility to identify structural features that distinguish different fibril polymorphs. Our analysis uncovered conserved and polymorph-specific features within alpha-synuclein fibrils. Notably, one site was conserved between ex vivo multiple system atrophy and in vitro H50Q mutant fibrils, suggesting the latter’s potential utility in drug discovery. Druggability predictions further prioritized ligandable sites across fibrils. Together, our findings establish a structure-based framework for identifying disease-relevant features and mapping them onto suitable in vitro models, guiding the rational development of polymorph-specific diagnostics and therapeutics for amyloid-related disorders with improved translational potential.

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