The aggregation of Medin is closely related to the arterial wall degeneration and cerebrovascular dysfunction. In patients with vascular dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, the concentration of medin in cerebral arterioles increases, and Medin is co-localized with vascular amyloid-β (Aβ) deposits. Previous study demonstrates that Medin interacts directly with Aβ, forming heterologous fibrils with Aβ and promoting Aβ aggregation. However, the basic mechanism of the co-aggregation between Medin and Aβ remains largely elusive. Here, we explore the interactions and conformational ensembles of Aβ
42/Medin trimers in different peptide environments (self-aggregation vs. co-aggregation) by performing all-atom replica exchange molecular dynamic simulation on Aβ
42/Medin homotrimers and Aβ
42-Medin heterotrimer with an accumulated simulation time of 72 μs. Our results reveal that Aβ
42 exhibits higher affinity with Medin, and Aβ
42 and Medin have similar molecular recognition sites in self-aggregation and co-aggregation. The N-terminus of Aβ
42 and the C-terminus of Medin play critical roles in Aβ
42-Medin cross-talk. More importantly, co-aggregation significantly changes the interaction strength, binding patterns and structural characteristics of Aβ
42 and Medin. Intermolecular interactions of Aβ
42 trimers are relatively weak among three trimers, and the binding sites are concentrated between N- and N-termini, between N- and C-termini, and between C- and C-termini of Aβ
42. In contrast, intermolecular interactions of Medin trimers are the strongest, and the binding sites are widely and uniformly distributed in Medin peptides. Intermolecular interactions of Aβ
42 in Aβ
42-Medin heterotrimer decrease compared with those of Aβ
42 trimers, only the binding of the hydrophobic core regions (
16KLVFFA
21) is retained and other regions of Aβ
42 gain increase flexibility. Two-dimensional free energy landscapes reveal distinct conformational diversities between the homo- and heterotrimers, with the order of diversity being Medin/Aβ42-Medin trimers > Aβ
42 trimers. The
Rg of Aβ
42 trimers is smaller than those of the other two trimers, implying that Aβ
42 trimers possess a more compact structure, whereas Medin/Aβ
42-Medin trimers exhibit a relatively loose conformation. The Aβ
42 trimers possess the highest β content whereas Medin trimers exhibit the lowest β probability. It is found that Aβ
42-Medin co-aggregation induces Medin to form more β-structures with longer lengths and fewer helices, while promoting Aβ
42 to form more helices and fewer β-structures. High β-propensity regions of Medin in heterotrimers shift towards the C-terminus of Medin, suggesting that Medin utilizes its C-terminal β region as a core motif to drive its co-aggregation with Aβ
42. These results elucidate the detailed influences of co-aggregation on the interactions and conformations of Aβ
42 and Medin. This work provides key insights into the molecular mechanism of Aβ
42-Medin co-aggregation and the pathological mechanisms of cross-linking between related diseases.