Literature DB >> 17221316

Morphology and mechanical stability of amyloid-like peptide fibrils.

Patrick Mesquida1, Christian K Riener, Cait E MacPhee, Rachel A McKendry.   

Abstract

Synthetic, amyloid-like peptide fibrils have recently attracted interest as a novel, potentially biocompatible material for applications in biotechnology and tissue-engineering. In this paper, we report atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies of the morphology and mechanical stability of fibrils self-assembled in vitro from the short peptide TTR(105-115), which serves as a model system for amyloid fibrils. It forms predominantly straight rods of approximately 1 microm in length and of diameters between 7 nm and 12 nm. We found polymorphism, with some fibrils exhibiting an unstructured morphology and others showing a regular, longitudinal surface pattern of 90 nm periodicity. Contact mode AFM-imaging in air was utilised to perform mechanical tests of individual fibrils on the nanometer scale with a defined, vertical force in the nN-range applied by the AFM-tip. Above 100 nN, all fibrils showed a permanent, mechanical deformation whereas below 40 nN, fibrils remained unaffected. Tapping-mode AFM-imaging in water led to fibril decomposition within 1.5 h whereas tapping-mode imaging in air left fibrils intact. Additional investigations by circular-dichroism spectroscopy showed that dispersed fibrils were structurally stable in aqueous solution between pH 3 and pH 8, and in sodium phosphate buffer of concentration between 50 mM and 1 M.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17221316     DOI: 10.1007/s10856-006-0075-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mater Sci Mater Med        ISSN: 0957-4530            Impact factor:   3.896


  15 in total

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  7 in total

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5.  Nanomaterials: amyloids reflect their brighter side.

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Journal:  Nano Rev       Date:  2011-05-31

6.  Amyloid fibrils nucleated and organized by DNA origami constructions.

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7.  Towards Prebiotic Catalytic Amyloids Using High Throughput Screening.

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  7 in total

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