> In addition to being an energy source for biological reactions, for which micromolar concentrations are sufficient, we propose that millimolar concentrations of ATP may act to keep proteins soluble. This may in part explain why ATP is maintained in such high concentrations in cells.
Sure it's important for neurons to prevent amyloid-beta from aggregating, but we can explain why neurons have a super high (mM) ATP concentration for two other good reasons:
1. Unlike other cells, neurons conduct electrical signals. Every time a neuron fires it opens channels that allow sodium and potassium to flow through the membrane. Then, it needs to get those ions back across the membrane so the neuron can keep functioning. To do this neurons make prodigious use of Na/K-ATPase pumps, that exchange intracellular Na for extracellular K, against an electrochemical gradient. This is active transport that requires tons of ATP. In a typical animal cell active transport is a relatively small (~1/10th) portion of cellular energy expenditure compared to neurons (~7/10th).
2. ATP is used in actin filament polymerization. Each molecule of filamentous actin is coupled to an ATP molecule, and actin is found in neurons at mM concentrations. Actin is a major structural protein in cells, and plays a particularly important role in neurons. Actin helps create filopodial protrusions; if you compare a neuron to another type of cell you can immediately tell it's a protrusion machine. Even these protrusions (axons and dendrites) have protrusions (neurites and dendritic spines) that are constantly reorganizing to allow for structural plasticity among the brain's neural network connections. One of my dissertation projects was to simulate actin activity in neurons; for anyone's interested, here are some pretty neat visuals of this...
Actin polymerization to create a dendritic spine: https://youtu.be/JH-hGjzhEFQ
Small segment of a dendrite with surface receptor diffusion: https://www.youtube.com/embed/6ZNnBGgea0Y
Creating dendritic meshes in python: https://youtu.be/tDKUU0SqbSA
Like many lines of research manage to achieve, this finding adds a little more emphasis to the need to restore mitochondrial function in the old. Clearing damaged mitochondria, delivering replacement mitochondria to cells, allotopic expression of mitochondrial genes, and so forth.
I don't think there is much mystery here. As cells divide they accumulate (genetic, and other types of) errors. One thing that happens is proteins/peptides are more likely to end up in their most thermodynamically stable state, since it requires constant maintenance to avoid it.
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1. It was thought that adult neurons didn't divided at all until like 1998; now we know some new neurons are produced from progenitor sources at very low rates.
2. 30,000 to 40,000 skin cells are produced every minute.
"ATP kept proteins in boiled egg white from aggregating."
It also appears the concentrations they're talking about are quite reasonable (10mM or so).
That said, once an aggregate is formed you usually need pretty heroic methods to solubilize it. Much stronger detergents and denaturants at higher must be used, and in those cases you run into other problems.
After solubilizing the aggregate, you have to fold the individual proteins back up. But now you have to do it in an environment where you 1.) a molecule that keeps the protein unfolded and 2.) a ton of other unfolded proteins around. You could slowly get rid of 1.) by dialysis or something similar. But when you have a bunch of unfolded proteins hanging around together, you almost always get aggregates.
In practice, it's quite unlikely that ATP concentrations high enough to unfold an aggregate wouldn't unfold all sorts of other things. This would also mean the stuff you need to keep the rest of the cell working... so from a practical perspective this is unlikely to work.
> Known as an energy carrier, molecule can also solubilize proteins