Abstract
Amyloid proteins and peptides comprise a diverse group of molecules that vary both in size and amino-acid sequence, yet assemble into amyloid fibrils that have a common core structure. Kinetic studies of amyloid fibrillogenesis have revealed that certain amyloid proteins form oligomeric intermediates prior to fibril formation. We have investigated fibril formation with a peptide corresponding to residues 195-213 of the human prion protein. Through a combination of kinetic and equilibrium studies, we have found that the fibrillogenesis of this peptide proceeds as an all-or-none reaction where oligomeric intermediates are not stably populated. This variation in whether oligomeric intermediates are stably populated during fibril formation indicates that amyloid proteins assemble into a common fibrillar structure; however, they do so through different pathways.
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Zou, W. Q., Yang, D. S., Fraser, P. E., Cashman, N. R., & Chakrabartty, A. (2001). All or none fibrillogenesis of a prion peptide. European Journal of Biochemistry, 268(18), 4885–4891. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1327.2001.02415.x
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