Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Amyloid structures are universal structures, widely diffuse in nature. Silk, capable of forming
some of the strongest tensile materials on earth represents an important example of formation of
functional amyloid fibrils, a process reminiscent of the oligomerization of peptides involved in
neurodegenerative diseases. The stability of silk fibroin solutions in different conditions and its
transition from ?-helix/random coil to ?-sheet structures, at the basis of gelation processes and
fibril formation, have been here investigated and monitored employing different biophysical
approaches. Silk fibroin aggregation state as a function of concentration, pH and aging has been
characterized employing NMR ordered diffusion spectroscopy. The change of silk fibroin
diffusion coefficient over time, which reflects the progress of oligomerization, has been
monitored for silk fibroin alone and in the presence of a polycondensed aromatic dye, namely
rhodamine 6G. NMR, UV and DLS measurements indicated that rhodamine specifically binds to
silk fibroin with a micromolar KD. The reported data reveal, for the first time, that RHD is
capable of inhibiting fibroin self-association, thus controlling beta-conformational transition at the
basis of fibril formation. The described approach could be extended to further protein systems,
allowing better control of the oligomerisation process.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Silk fibroin; self-aggregation; NMR spectroscopy; gelation/fibril formation; aggregation inhibition; ligand binding
List of contributors:
Molinari, Henriette; Botta, Chiara; Ragona, LAURA GIUDITTA
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