A droplet reactor on a super-hydrophobic surface allows control and characterization of amyloid fibril growth
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
Methods to produce protein amyloid fibrils, in vitro, and in situ structure characterization, are of primary importance in biology, medicine, and pharmacology. We first demonstrated the droplet on a super-hydrophobic substrate as the reactor to produce protein amyloid fibrils with real-time monitoring of the growth process by using combined light-sheet microscopy and thermal imaging. The molecular structures were characterized by Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction and X-ray scattering. We demonstrated that the convective flow induced by the temperature gradient of the sample is the main driving force in the growth of well-ordered protein fibrils. Particular attention was devoted to PHF6 peptide and full-length Tau441 protein to form amyloid fibrils. By a combined experimental with the molecular dynamics simulations, the conformational polymorphism of these amyloid fibrils were characterized. The study provided a feasible procedure to optimize the amyloid fibrils formation and characterizations of other types of proteins in future studies.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
amyloid fibrils; super-hydrophobic; molecular structure; proteins; X-ray diffraction; scattering; conformational polymorphism; convective flow
List of contributors:
Autiero, Ida; Giannini, Cinzia; Altamura, Davide
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