Solution structure of an amyloid-forming protein during photoinitiated hexamer-dodecamer transitions revealed through small-angle neutron scattering |
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Authors: | Hamill Andrea C Wang Shao-Chun Lee C Ted |
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Affiliation: | Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-1211, USA. |
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Abstract: | Shape-reconstruction analysis applied to small angle neutron scattering (SANS) data is used to determine the in vitro conformations of alpha-chymotrypsin oligomers that form as a result of partial unfolding with a photoresponsive surfactant. In the presence of the photoactive surfactant under visible light, the native oligomers (dimers or compact hexamers) rearrange into expanded corkscrew-like hexamers. Converting the surfactant to the photopassive form with UV light illumination causes the hexamers to laterally aggregate and intertwine into dodecamers with elongated, twisted conformations containing cross-sectional dimensions similar to amyloid protofilaments. Secondary-structure measurements with FT-IR indicate that this photoinduced hexamer-to-dodecamer association occurs through intermolecular beta sheets stabilized with hydrogen bonds, similar to amyloid formation. Traditional structural characterization techniques such as X-ray crystallography and NMR are not easily amenable to the study of these non-native protein conformations; however, SANS is ideally suited to the study of these associated intermediates, providing direct observation of the mechanism of oligomeric formation in an amyloid-forming protein. Combined with photoinitiated hexamer-to-dodecamer associations in the presence of the photoresponsive surfactant, this study could provide unique insight into the amyloidosis disease pathway, as well as novel disease treatment strategies. |
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