Issue 7, 2005

Template-controlled conformational patterns of insulin fibrillar self-assembly reflect history of solvation of the amyloid nuclei

Abstract

In the presence of ethanol, insulin forms amyloid morphologically distinct from the ambient specimen. Due to stability of fibrils and the autocatalytic character of the process, the two amyloid templates, when seeded, replicate the initial morphologies (and inter-β-strand hydrogen bonding patterns) regardless of the environmental biases, such as the cosolvent presence. Such “templated memory” effect is advantageous in synthesizing structurally uniform protein nanofibrils under conditions favoring alternative “wild” forms. This also appears to parallel “prion strains” phenomenon, suggesting that “strains” may reflect a generic trait in all amyloids including those not associated with disease.

Graphical abstract: Template-controlled conformational patterns of insulin fibrillar self-assembly reflect history of solvation of the amyloid nuclei

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
14 Feb 2005
Accepted
23 Feb 2005
First published
28 Feb 2005

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2005,7, 1349-1351

Template-controlled conformational patterns of insulin fibrillar self-assembly reflect history of solvation of the amyloid nuclei

W. Dzwolak, R. Jansen, V. Smirnovas, A. Loksztejn, S. Porowski and R. Winter, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2005, 7, 1349 DOI: 10.1039/B502255J

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