| Literature DB >> 27650589 |
Tanja Deckert-Gaudig1, Dmitry Kurouski2, Martin A B Hedegaard3, Pushkar Singh4, Igor K Lednev5, Volker Deckert1,4.
Abstract
The formation of insoluble β-sheet-rich protein structures known as amyloid fibrils is associated with numerous neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. A detailed understanding of the molecular structure of the fibril surface is of interest as the first contact with the physiological environment in vivo and plays a decisive role in biological activity and associated toxicity. Recent studies reveal that the inherent sensitivity and specificity of tip-enhanced Raman scattering (TERS) renders this technique a compelling method for fibril surface analysis at the single-particle level. Here, the reproducibility of TERS is demonstrated, indicating its relevance for detecting molecular variations. Consequently, individual fibrils are systematically investigated at nanometer spatial resolution. Spectral parameters were obtained by band-fitting, particularly focusing on the identification of the secondary structure via the amide III band and the differentiation of hydrophobic and hydrophilic domains on the surface. In addition multivariate data analysis, specifically the N-FINDR procedure, was employed to generate structure-specific maps. The ability of TERS to localize specific structural domains on fibril surfaces shows promise to the development of new fibril dissection strategies and can be generally applied to any (bio)chemical surface when structural variations at the nanometer level are of interest.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27650589 PMCID: PMC5030623 DOI: 10.1038/srep33575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Marker bands in the TERS spectra of different insulin fibrils used for the identification of specific amino acids.
| Experiment 1, tip 1, | Experiment 2, tip 2, | Experiment 3, tip 3, | Experiment 4, tip 3, | Assignment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wavenumber/cm−1 | ||||
| 660, 671–673, 686–688, 698 | 657–667, 680 | 658–666, 682–693 | cys–cys (CS) | |
| 780, 793–806 | 760–775 | 750–770, 78–787 | 795–799 | cys–cys (CS) |
| 832–835, 845–848, 865–868 | 830 | 820–827, 834–840 | 819–826 | tyr (ring breathing) |
| 1060–1065, 1081–1083 | 1060–1067 | 1067–1078 | 1066–1074 | asn, gln (NH3+) |
| 1070–1080 | lys | |||
| 1088–1094 | 1083–1090 | arg | ||
| 1121–1128 | 1130–1140 | 1122–1130, 1140–1150 | 1139–1148 | asn, gln (NH3+) |
| 1145–1153 | lys | |||
| 1166–1170 | arg | |||
| 1210–1216 | 1206–1209 | 1186–1191, 1196–1204 | 1198–1192 | CH, tyr |
| 1230, 1260–1274, 1284–1290, 1290–1299 | 1219–1229, 1230–1237, 1240–1249, 1251–1259, 1260–1267, 1271–1277, 1294–1305 | 1210–1225, 1240–1247, 1271–1276, 1293–1311 | 1237–1250, 1263–1270, 1271–1277, 1293–1308 | amide III, CH2 |
| 1638, 1644 | 1634–1648 | 1640–1650 | amide I (α-helix/unordered) | |
Figure 1(a) AFM topography of an insulin fibril scanned during the TERS experiment. The gray 24.5-nm line indicates the investigated area. (b) Fifty raw spectra recorded along the fibril main axis with a step-size of 0.5 nm (λ = 532 nm, tacq = 1 s); the three-letter codes refer to the respective amino acids. (c) Sequence of insulin (top: A-chain, bottom: B-chain) with the rectangle indicating the part of sequence that was most likely detected within the first 6 nm. (d) Selected fitted band parameters of the TERS spectra in (b) showing band intensity (spot) plotted versus the position on the fibril; the spot size corresponds to the band intensity and is normalized to each band separately; color code: cys-cys-orange; phe-dark red; asn, gln-magenta; amide III-red; arg, lys, N-terminal-light blue; CH, CH2-green; ala, val, ile, leu-gray; glu, C-terminal-brown; unspecific bands-black. (e) Schematic sketch of the surface hydrophilicity, domain with a mixture of hydrophilic and hydrophobic residues-dotted, domain with mainly hydrophobic character-gray.
Figure 2(a) Raw TERS spectra acquired along a 49.5-nm line (step-size: 1 nm) on an insulin fibril (λ = 532 nm, tacq = 1 s). (b) Band fitting parameters plotted versus position on fibril; spot size corresponds to the band intensity and is normalized to each band; color code: cys-cys-orange; tyr-blue; asn, gln-magenta; amide I, III-red; his-turquoise; gly-lilac, CH, CH2-green; unspecific bands-black. (c) Schematic sketch of the surface hydrophilicity, mainly hydrophilic domain-checked; domains with a mixture of hydrophilic and hydrophobic residues-dotted.
Figure 3(a) AFM topography of a fibril for which 200 spectra on four 1 nm laterally shifted lines were recorded consecutively; each line: 49 nm with 50 equidistant measuring points; (λ = 532 nm, tacq = 5 s. (b) Maps generated from the fitted band intensities; pixel brightness corresponds to band intensity. (c) Maps obtained from N-FINDR algorithm analysis; pixels represent the contribution of so-called “endmember” spectra (linear combination of spectra). All maps show the distribution of assigned amino acids and amide bands within the investigated area.