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Journal article

Mechanical Stress Affects Glucagon Fibrillation Kinetics and Fibril Structure

In Langmuir 2011, Volume 27, Issue 20, pp. 12539-12549
From

iNANO, Center for Insoluble Protein Structures (inSPIN), Department of Molecular Biology1

Institute for Storage Ring Facilities, ISA2

Department of Physics and Astronomy3

Protein Structure and Biophysics4

Mechanical stress can strongly influence the capability of a protein to aggregate and the kinetics of aggregation, but there is little insight into the underlying mechanism. Here we study the effect of different mechanical stress conditions on the fibrillation of the peptide hormone glucagon, which forms different fibrils depending on temperature, pH, ionic strength, and concentration.

A combination of spectroscopic and microscopic data shows that fibrillar polymorphism can also be induced by mechanical stress. We observed two classes of fibrils: a low-stress and a high-stress class, which differ in their kinetic profiles, secondary structure as well as morphology and that are able to self-propagate in a template-dependent fashion.

The bending rigidity of the low-stress fibrils is sensitive to the degree of mechanical perturbation. We propose a fibrillation model, where interfaces play a fundamental role in the switch between the two fibrillar classes. Our work also raises the cautionary note that mechanical perturbation is a potential source of variability in the study of fibrillation mechanisms and fibril structures.

Language: English
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Year: 2011
Pages: 12539-12549
ISSN: 15205827 and 07437463
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1021/la202125c

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