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1.
Proteins aggregated into spherulite structures of amyloid fibrils have been observed in patients with certain brain diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. The conditions under which these protein spherulites form and grow are not currently known. In order to illuminate the role of environmental factors on protein spherulites, this research aims to explore the kinetics and mechanisms of spherulite formation and growth, as monitored by optical microscopy, in a range of salt concentrations, and initial protein concentrations for two model proteins: bovine β-lactoglobulin and insulin.These two proteins are significantly different in their size and fibril growth rate, but both of these proteins have been shown previously to form amyloid fibrils and spherulites under low pH conditions. The growth pattern of spherulites in each protein solution was monitored and quantified using a linear polymerisation reaction model which allowed for quantification of formation and growth rates across experiments.Two themes were found in the experimental results of spherulite formation and growth: the two model protein systems behaved very similarly to one another when viewed on relative scales, and the spherulites in these systems followed trends seen in some of the previous research of amyloid fibril growth.Specifically, in the presence of salt, both β-lactoglobulin and insulin systems demonstrated maximum growth rates at the same salt concentration, possibly suggesting the role that salt plays in altering rates may not be protein specific (e.g. anion binding to aid unfolding), but may be generic (e.g. electrostatic shielding of repelling charges).Specifically, with variations in the initial protein concentrations, spherulite trends across both model systems were a decrease in appearance time (faster appearance) and an increased growth rate as concentration increased. The appearance time decreased at a diminishing rate towards a limiting shortest appearance time. A limiting shortest appearance time suggests that, in the higher concentrations of protein tested, spherulite formation is not dependent upon the spatial concentration of protein but on the preparedness of the protein to form or join the spherulite.  相似文献   

2.
Amyloid fibril forming proteins have been related to some neurodegenerative diseases and are not fully understood. In some such systems, these amyloid fibrils have been found to form radially oriented spherulite structures. The thermal dependence of formation and growth of these spherulite structures in two model protein systems, beta-lactoglobulin and insulin at low pH aqueous and high temperature conditions, have been monitored with time-lapse optical microscopy and quantified. A population-based polymerization reaction model was developed and applied to the experimental data with excellent agreement. While spherulites in the insulin solutions formed and grew at approximately 25x the rate of spherulites in the beta-lactoglobulin solutions, the temperature dependence and activation energies of both systems were found to be very similar to one another, suggesting that the underlying rate-limiting mechanisms for both formation and growth are consistent across the two systems. The similarity of both of these amyloid fibril forming protein systems provides confidence in their use as model systems for extrapolating understanding to similar systems involved in neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of amyloid-containing spherulite-like structures has been observed in some instances of amyloid diseases, as well as in amyloid fibril-containing solutions in vitro. In this article we describe the structure and kinetics of bovine insulin amyloid fibril spherulites formed in the presence and absence of different salts and at different salt concentrations. The general spherulite structure consists of radially oriented amyloid fibrils, as shown by optical microscopy and environmental scanning electron microscopy. In the center of each spherulite, a "core" of less regularly oriented material is observed, whose size decreases when the spherulites are formed in the presence of increasing concentrations of NaCl. Similarly, amyloid fibrils form faster in the presence of NaCl than in its absence. A smaller enhancement of the rate of formation with salt concentration is observed for spherulites. These data suggest that both amyloid fibril formation and random aggregation occur concurrently under the conditions tested. Changes in their relative rates result in the different-sized cores observed in the spherulites. This mechanism can be likened to that leading to the formation of spherulites of polyethylene, in agreement with observations that polypeptide chains under partially denaturing conditions can exhibit behavior not dissimilar to that of synthetic polymers.  相似文献   

4.
The peptide hormone insulin forms a spherical aggregate, called a spherulite, at low pH and high temperature. A spherulite is composed of a core and many fibrils extending from it. These fibrils are thought to be amyloid fibers with a beta-sheet structure. In the present study, spherulites with a diameter of 50-100 microm were examined by X-ray fiber diffraction using a 6 microm beam. When a spherulite was scanned with the microbeam and the observed diffraction patterns were arranged in a two-dimensional array, the direction of the scatter was centrosymmetric, demonstrating a symmetric growth of fibrils. There were diffraction peaks at Bragg spacings of 23 nm, 3.3 nm and 1.2 nm in the direction perpendicular to the fibrils and 0.48 nm along the fibrils. The 0.48 nm reflection shows that the hydrogen bonds between beta-strands are along the fibril. The 23 nm reflection corresponds to the separation between fibrils, the 3.3 nm reflection is due to the arrangement of protofilaments, and the 1.2 nm reflection arises from the arrangement of peptide chains. On the basis of these results, a model of a fibril with an extended insulin molecule is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
Protein crystals form in supersaturated solutions via a nucleation and growth mechanism. The amyloid fibrils of denatured proteins also form via a nucleation and growth mechanism. This similarity suggests that, although protein crystals and amyloid fibrils are distinct in their morphologies, both processes can be controlled in a similar manner. It has been established that ultrasonication markedly accelerates the formation of amyloid fibrils and simultaneously breaks them down into fragmented fibrils. In this study, we investigated the effects of ultrasonication on the crystallization of hen egg white lysozyme and glucose isomerase from Streptomyces rubiginosus. Protein crystallization was monitored by light scattering, tryptophan fluorescence, and light transmittance. Repeated ultrasonic irradiations caused the crystallization of lysozyme and glucose isomerase after cycles of irradiations. The size of the ultrasonication-induced crystals was small and homogeneous, and their numbers were larger than those obtained under quiescent conditions. Switching off ultrasonic irradiation when light scattering or tryptophan fluorescence began to change resulted in the formation of larger crystals due to the suppression of the further nucleation and fractures in preformed crystals. The results indicate that protein crystallization and amyloid fibrillation are explained on the basis of a common phase diagram in which ultrasonication accelerates the formation of crystals or crystal-like amyloid fibrils as well as fragmentation of preformed crystals or fibrils.  相似文献   

6.
《朊病毒》2013,7(4):224-235
Propagation and infectivity of prions in human prionopathies are likely associated with conversion of the mainly α-helical human prion protein, HuPrP, into an aggregated form with amyloid-like properties. Previous reports on efficient conversion of recombinant HuPrP have used mild to harsh denaturing conditions to generate amyloid fibrils in vitro. Herein we report on the in vitro conversion of four forms of truncated HuPrP (sequences 90-231 and 121-231 with and without an N-terminal hexa histidine tag) into amyloid-like fibrils within a few hours by using a protocol (phosphate buffered saline solutions at neutral pH with intense agitation) close to physiological conditions. The conversion process monitored by thioflavin T, ThT, revealed a three stage process with lag, growth and equilibrium phases. Seeding with preformed fibrils shortened the lag phase demonstrating the classic nucleated polymerization mechanism for the reaction. Interestingly, comparing thioflavin T kinetics with solubility and turbidity kinetics it was found that the protein initially formed non-thioflavionophilic, morphologically disordered aggregates that over time matured into amyloid fibrils. By transmission electron microscopy and by fluorescence microscopy of aggregates stained with luminescent conjugated polythiophenes (LCPs); we demonstrated that HuPrP undergoes a conformational conversion where spun and woven fibrils protruded from morphologically disordered aggregates. The initial aggregation functioned as a kinetic trap that decelerated nucleation into a fibrillation competent nucleus, but at the same time without aggregation there was no onset of amyloid fibril formation. The agitation, which was necessary for fibril formation to be induced, transiently exposes the protein to the air-water interface suggests a hitherto largely unexplored denaturing environment for prion conversion.  相似文献   

7.
Propagation and infectivity of prions in human prionopathies are likely associated with conversion of the mainly a-helical human prion protein, HuPrP, into an aggregated form with amyloid-like properties. Previous reports on efficient conversion of recombinant HuPrP have used mild to harsh denaturing conditions to generate amyloid fibrils in vitro. Herein we report on the in vitro conversion of four forms of truncated HuPrP (sequences 90–231 and 121–231 with and without an N-terminal hexa histidine tag) into amyloid-like fibrils within a few hours by using a protocol (phosphate buffered saline solutions at neutral pH with intense agitation) close to physiological conditions. The conversion process monitored by thioflavin T, ThT, revealed a three stage process with lag, growth and equilibrium phases. Seeding with preformed fibrils shortened the lag phase demonstrating the classic nucleated polymerization mechanism for the reaction. Interestingly, comparing thioflavin T kinetics with solubility and turbidity kinetics it was found that the protein initially formed non- thioflavionophilic, morphologically disordered aggregates that over time matured into amyloid fibrils. By transmission electron microscopy and by fluorescence microscopy of aggregates stained with luminescent conjugated polythiophenes (LCPs); we demonstrated that HuPrP undergoes a conformational conversion where spun and woven fibrils protruded from morphologically disordered aggregates. The initial aggregation functioned as a kinetic trap that decelerated nucleation into a fibrillation competent nucleus, but at the same time without aggregation there was no onset of amyloid fibril formation. The agitation, which was necessary for fibril formation to be induced, transiently exposes the protein to the air-water interface suggests a hitherto largely unexplored denaturing environment for prion conversion.Key words: misfolding, aggregation, amyloid, prion, conformational conversion, fluorescence  相似文献   

8.
Amyloid fibrils form in supersaturated solutions of precursor proteins by a nucleation and growth mechanism characterized by a lag time. Although the lag time provides a clue to understanding the complexity of nucleation events, its long period and low reproducibility have been obstacles for exact analysis. Ultrasonication is known to effectively break supersaturation and force fibrillation. By constructing a Handai amyloid burst inducer, which combines a water bath-type ultrasonicator and a microplate reader, we examined the ultrasonication-forced fibrillation of several proteins, with a focus on the fluctuation in the lag time. Amyloid fibrillation of hen egg white lysozyme was examined at pH 2.0 in the presence of 1.0–5.0 M guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl), in which the dominant species varied from the native to denatured conformations. Although fibrillation occurred at various concentrations of GdnHCl, the lag time varied largely, with a minimum being observed at ∼3.0 m, the concentration at which GdnHCl-dependent denaturation ended. The coefficient of variation of the lag time did not depend significantly on the GdnHCl concentration and was 2-fold larger than that of the ultrasonication-dependent oxidation of iodide, a simple model reaction. These results suggest that the large fluctuation observed in the lag time for amyloid fibrillation originated from a process associated with a common amyloidogenic intermediate, which may have been a relatively compact denatured conformation. We also suggest that the Handai amyloid burst inducer system will be useful for studying the mechanism of crystallization of proteins because proteins form crystals by the same mechanism as amyloid fibrils under supersaturation.  相似文献   

9.
The formation of amyloid fibrils by the SH3 domain of the alpha-subunit of bovine phosphatidylinositol-3'-kinase (PI3-SH3) has been investigated under carefully controlled solution conditions. NMR and CD characterisation of the denatured states from which fibrils form at low pH show that their properties can be correlated with the nature of the resulting aggregates defined by EM and FTIR spectroscopy. Compact partially folded states, favoured by the addition of anions, are prone to precipitate rapidly into amorphous species, whilst well-defined fibrillar structures are formed slowly from more expanded denatured states. Kinetic data obtained by a variety of techniques show a clear lag phase in the formation of amyloid fibrils. NMR spectroscopy shows no evidence for a significant population of small oligomers in solution during or after this lag phase. EM and FTIR indicate the presence of amorphous aggregates (protofibrils) rich in beta-structure after the lag phase but prior to the development of well-defined amyloid fibrils. These observations strongly suggest a nucleation and growth mechanism for the formation of the ordered aggregates. The morphologies of the fibrillar structures were found to be highly sensitive to the pH at which the protein solutions are incubated. This can be attributed to the effect of small perturbations in the electrostatic interactions that stabilise the contacts between the protofilaments forming the amyloid fibrils. Moreover, different hydrogen bonding patterns related to the various aggregate morphologies can be distinguished by FTIR analysis.  相似文献   

10.
Using the peptide hormone glucagon and Aβ(1-40) as model systems, we have sought to elucidate the mechanisms by which fibrils grow and multiply. We here present real-time observations of growing fibrils at a single-fibril level. Growing from preformed seeds, glucagon fibrils were able to generate new fibril ends by continuously branching into new fibrils. To our knowledge, this is the first time amyloid fibril branching has been observed in real-time. Glucagon fibrils formed by branching always grew in the forward direction of the parent fibril with a preferred angle of 35-40°. Furthermore, branching never occurred at the tip of the parent fibril. In contrast, in a previous study by some of us, Aβ(1-40) fibrils grew exclusively by elongation of preformed seeds. Fibrillation kinetics in bulk solution were characterized by light scattering. A growth process with branching, or other processes that generate new ends from existing fibrils, should theoretically give rise to different fibrillation kinetics than growth without such a process. We show that the effect of adding seeds should be particularly different in the two cases. Our light-scattering data on glucagon and Aβ(1-40) confirm this theoretical prediction, demonstrating the central role of fibril-dependent nucleation in amyloid fibril growth  相似文献   

11.
The formation of amyloid aggregates in tissue is a pathological feature of many neurodegenerative diseases and type II diabetes. Amyloid deposition, the process of amyloid growth by the association of individual soluble amyloid molecules with a pre-existing amyloid template (i.e., plaque), is known to be critical for amyloid formation in vivo. The requirement for a natural amyloid template, however, has made amyloid deposition study difficult and cumbersome. In the present work, we developed a novel, synthetic amyloid template by attaching amyloid seeds covalently onto an N-hydroxysuccinimide-activated surface, where insulin was chosen as a model amyloidogenic protein. According to ex situ atomic force microscopy observations, insulin monomers in solution were deposited onto the synthetic amyloid template to form fibrils, like hair growth. The fibril formation on the template occurred without lag time, and its rate was highly accelerated than in the solution. The fibrils were long, over 2 mum, and much thinner than those in the solution, which was caused by limited nucleation sites on the template surface and lack of lateral twisting between fibrils. According to our investigations using thioflavin T-induced fluorescence, birefringent Congo red binding, and circular dichroism, fibrils grown on the template were identified to be amyloids that formed through a conformational rearrangement of insulin monomers upon interaction with the template. The amyloid deposition rate followed saturation kinetics with respect to insulin concentration in the solution. The characteristics of amyloid deposition on the synthetic template were in agreement with previous studies performed with human amyloid plaques. It is demonstrated that the synthetic amyloid template can be used for the screening of inhibitors on amyloid deposition in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
The structural unambiguity of folding is lost when disordered protein molecules convert into β-sheet-rich fibrils. The resulting polymorphism of protein aggregates has been studied in the context of its biomedical consequences. Events underlying the conformational variance of amyloid fibrils, as well as physicochemical boundaries between folding and misfolding pathways, remain obscure. Bifurcation and chiral mesoscopic-scale organization of amyloid fibrils are new aspects of protein misfolding. Here we characterize bifurcation events accompanying insulin fibrillation upon intensive vortexing. Upon agitation, two types of insulin fibrils with opposite chiral senses are formed; however, predominance of either species is only stochastically determined. The uncertainty of fibrils’ chiral sense holds only for fibrils grown within the physiological temperature range, while above 50 °C, the bifurcation is no longer observed—fibrils’ chiral moieties become uniformly biased towards ligand probes, as revealed by the extrinsic Cotton effect of thioflavin T, Congo red, and molecular iodine. According to transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy data, chiral variants of insulin fibrils consist of fibrous superstructures, distinct from spherulites, formed by the protein in nonagitated solutions. Gradual dissociation of the fibrils in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide is noncooperative and can be resolved into three distinct phases: decay of the higher-order chiral structures, breakdown of fibrils, and unfolding of intermolecular β-sheet. The chiral aggregates are also destabilized by elution of NaCl implying that Debye screening of charged β-sheets provided by chloride counterions is needed for sustaining their kinetic stability. At elevated temperatures, cross-seeding of agitated insulin samples with preformed fibrils revealed a chiral conflict that prevented the passing of structural features of mother seeds to daughter fibrils in a manner typical of amyloid “strains.”  相似文献   

13.
Amyloid fibrils are fibrillar aggregates of denatured proteins associated with a large number of amyloidoses. The formation of amyloid fibrils has been considered to occur by nucleation and elongation. Real-time imaging of the elongation as well as linear morphology of amyloid fibrils suggests that all elongation events occur at the growing ends of fibrils. On the other hand, we suggested that monomers also bind to the lateral sides of preformed fibrils during the seed-dependent elongation, diffuse to the growing ends, and finally make further conformation changes to the mature amyloid fibrils. To examine lateral binding during the elongation of fibrils, we used islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP), which has been associated with type II diabetes, and prepared IAPP modified with the fluorescence dye, Alexa532. By monitoring the elongation process with amyloid specific thioflavin T and Alexa532 fluorescence, we obtained overlapping images of the two fluorescence probes, which indicated lateral binding. These results are similar to the surface diffusion-dependent growth of crystals, further supporting the similarities between amyloid fibrillation and the crystallization of substances.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetics of spontaneous assembly of amyloid fibrils of wild-type beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)M) in vitro, under acid conditions (pH 2.5) and low ionic strength, has been followed using thioflavin-T (ThT) binding. In parallel experiments, the morphology of the different fibrillar species present at different time-points during the growth process were characterised using tapping-mode atomic force microscopy (TM-AFM) in air and negative stain electron microscopy (EM). The thioflavin-T assay shows a characteristic lag phase during which the nucleation of fibrils occurs before a rapid growth in fibril density. The volume of fibrils deposited on mica measured from TM-AFM images at each time-point correlates well with the fluorescence data. TM-AFM and negative-stain EM revealed the presence of various kinds of protein aggregates in the lag phase that disappear concomitantly with a rise in the density of amyloid fibrils, suggesting that these aggregates precede fibril growth and may act as nucleation sites. Three distinct morphologies of mature amyloid fibrils were observed within a single growth experiment, as observed previously for the wild-type protein and the variant N17D. Additional supercoiled morphologies of the lower-order fibrils were observed. Comparative height analysis from the TM-AFM data allows each of the mature fibril types and single protofilaments to be identified unambiguously, and reveals that the assembly occurs via a hierarchy of morphological states.  相似文献   

15.
Today, the investigation of the structure of ordered protein aggregates-amyloid fibrils, the influence of the native structure of the protein and the external conditions on the process of fibrillation-is the subject of intense investigations. The aim of the present work is to study the kinetics of formation of insulin amyloid fibrils at low pH values (conditions that are used at many stages of the isolation and purification of the protein) using the fluorescent probe thioflavin T. It is shown that the increase of the fluorescence intensity of ThT during the formation of amyloid fibrils is described by a sigmoidal curve, in which three areas can be distinguished: the lag phase, growth, and a plateau, which characterize the various stages of fibril formation. Despite the variation in the length of the lag phase at the same experimental conditions (pH and temperature), it is seen to drop during solution stirring and seeding. Data obtained by electron microscopy showed that the formed fibrils are long, linear filaments ~20 nm in diameter. With increasing incubation time, the fibril diameter does not change, while the length increases to 2–3 μm, which is accompanied by a significant increase in the number of fibril aggregates. All the experimental data show that, irrespective of the kinetics of formation of amyloid fibrils, their properties after the completion of the fibrillation process are identical. The results of this work, together with the previous studies of insulin amyloid fibrils, may be important for clarification the mechanism of their formation, as well as for the treatment of amyloidosis associated with the aggregation of insulin.  相似文献   

16.
Amyloid fibrils, similar to crystals, form through nucleation and growth. Because of the high free-energy barrier of nucleation, the spontaneous formation of amyloid fibrils occurs only after a long lag phase. Ultrasonication is useful for inducing amyloid nucleation and thus for forming fibrils, while the use of a microplate reader with thioflavin T fluorescence is suitable for detecting fibrils in many samples simultaneously. Combining the use of ultrasonication and microplate reader, we propose an efficient approach to studying the potential of proteins to form amyloid fibrils. With β2-microglobulin, an amyloidogenic protein responsible for dialysis-related amyloidosis, fibrils formed within a few minutes at pH 2.5. Even under neutral pH conditions, fibrils formed after a lag time of 1.5 h. The results propose that fibril formation is a physical reaction that is largely limited by the high free-energy barrier, which can be effectively reduced by ultrasonication. This approach will be useful for developing a high-throughput assay of the amyloidogenicity of proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Insulin, as other amyloid proteins, can form amyloid fibrils at certain conditions. The self-assembled aggregation process of insulin can result in a variety of conformations, starting from small oligomers, going through various types of protofibrils, and finishing with bundles of fibrils. One of the most common consensuses among the various self-assembly processes that are suggested in the literature is the formation of an early stage nucleus conformation. Here we present an additional insight for the self-assembly process of insulin. We show that at the early lag phase of the process (prior to fibril formation) the insulin monomers self-assemble into ordered nanostructures. The most notable feature of this early self-assembly process is the formation of nanocrystalline nucleus regions with a strongly bound electron-hole confinement, which also change the secondary structure of the protein. Each step in the self-assembly process is characterized by an optical spectroscopic signature, and possesses a narrow size distribution. By following the spectroscopic signature we can measure the potency of amyloid fibrils inhibitors already at the lag phase. We further demonstrate it by the use of epigallocatechin gallate, a known inhibitor for insulin fibrils. The findings can result in a spectroscopic-based application for the analysis of amyloid fibrils inhibitors.  相似文献   

18.
Many proteins undergoe self‐assembly into fibrillar structures known as amyloid fibrils. During the self‐assembly process, related structures known as spherulites can be formed. Herein we report a facile method where the balance between amyloid fibrils and spherulites can be controlled by stirring of the reaction mixture during the initial stages of the self‐assembly process. Moreover, we report how this methodology can be used to prepare non‐covalently functionalized amyloid fibrils. By stirring the reaction mixture continuously or for a limited time during the lag phase, the fibril length, and hence the propensity to form liquid crystalline phases, can be influenced. This phenomena is utilized in order to prepare films consisting of aligned protein fibrils incorporating the laser dye Nile red. The resulting films display polarized Nile red fluorescence. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 105: 249–259, 2016.  相似文献   

19.
The formation of polypeptide aggregates, including amyloid fibrils and prions, is a biochemical process of considerable interest in the context of its association with ageing and neurodegeneration. Aggregation occurs typically with a lag phase and a growth phase that reflect an underlying nucleation-polymerisation mechanism. While the propensity of nucleation can be estimated from the lag time t(l), the efficiency of growth is represented by the growth rate k(g). Here, I have analysed the absolute k(g) and t(l) values from a total of 298 samples prepared from insulin, glucagon and different sequence variants of the Alzheimer's Abeta(1-40) peptide. Although these samples differ in the conditions of aggregation, systematic comparison reveals an overall similarity in the plot of k(g)versus t(l). The plot fits readily with the simple equation k(g)=alpha/t(l) and by using a proportionality factor alpha of 4.5. In contrast to the individual values of k(g) and t(l) that depend substantially on sequential and environmental parameters, alpha seems much less affected by such factors. These data suggest mechanistic similarities in the nucleation behaviour of different amyloid-like fibrils and aggregates.  相似文献   

20.
Amyloid proteins are converted from their native‐fold to long β‐sheet‐rich fibrils in a typical sigmoidal time‐dependent protein aggregation curve. This reaction process from monomer or dimer to oligomer to nuclei and then to fibrils is the subject of intense study. The main results of this work are based on the use of a well‐studied model amyloid protein, insulin, which has been used in vitro by others. Nine osmolyte molecules, added during the protein aggregation process for the production of amyloid fibrils, slow‐down or speed up the process depending on the molecular structure of each osmolyte. Of these, all stabilizing osmolytes (sugars) slow down the aggregation process in the following order: tri > di > monosaccharides, whereas destabilizing osmolytes (urea, guanidium hydrochloride) speed up the aggregation process in a predictable way that fits the trend of all osmolytes. With respect to kinetics, we illustrate, by adapting our earlier reaction model to the insulin system, that the intermediates (trimers, tetramers, pentamers, etc.) are at very low concentrations and that nucleation is orders of magnitude slower than fibril growth. The results are then collated into a cogent explanation using the preferential exclusion and accumulation of osmolytes away from and at the protein surface during nucleation, respectively. Both the heat of solution and the neutral molecular surface area of the osmolytes correlate linearly with two fitting parameters of the kinetic rate model, that is, the lag time and the nucleation rate prior to fibril formation. These kinetic and thermodynamic results support the preferential exclusion model and the existence of oligomers including nuclei and larger structures that could induce toxicity. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009  相似文献   

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