Population of Nonnative States of Lysozyme Variants Drives Amyloid Fibril Formation
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2011 papers
Abstract
The propensity of protein molecules to self-assemble into highly ordered, fibrillar aggregates lies at the heart of understanding many disorders ranging from Alzheimer's disease to systemic lysozyme amyloidosis. In this paper we use highly accurate kinetic measurements of amyloid fibril growth in combination with spectroscopic tools to quantify the effect of modifications in solution conditions and in the amino acid sequence of human lysozyme on its propensity to form amyloid fibrils under acidic conditions. We elucidate and quantify the correlation between the rate of amyloid growth and the population of nonnative states, and we show that changes in amyloidogenicity are almost entirely due to alterations in the stability of the native state, while other regions of the global free-energy surface remain largely unmodified. These results provide insight into the complex dynamics of a macromolecule on a multidimensional energy landscape and point the way for a better understanding of amyloid diseases.
Related Papers
- → Structural Models of Amyloid‐Like Fibrils(2006)204 cited
- → Sucrose modulates insulin amyloid-like fibril formation: effect on the aggregation mechanism and fibril morphology(2017)21 cited
- → Morphology and mechanical properties of multi-stranded amyloid fibrils probed by atomistic and coarse-grained simulations(2015)14 cited
- → A generic class of amyloid fibril inhibitors(2014)18 cited
- → Formation of amyloid fibrils from β‐amylase(2012)9 cited