Self-assembly of functional, amphipathic amyloid monolayers by the fungal hydrophobin EAS

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Abstract

The hydrophobin EAS from the fungus Neurospora crassa forms functional amyloid fibrils called rodlets that facilitate spore formation and dispersal. Self-assembly of EAS into fibrillar rodlets occurs spontaneously at hydrophobic:hydrophilic interfaces and the rodlets further associate laterally to form amphipathic monolayers. We have used site-directed mutagenesis and peptide experiments to identify the region of EAS that drives intermolecular association and formation of the cross-β rodlet structure. Transplanting this region into a nonamyloidogenic hydrophobin enables it to form rodlets. We have also determined the structure and dynamics of an EAS variant with reduced rodlet-forming ability. Taken together, these data allow us to pinpoint the conformational changes that take place when hydrophobins self-assemble at an interface and to propose a model for the amphipathic EAS rodlet structure.

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Macindoe, I., Kwan, A. H., Ren, Q., Morris, V. K., Yang, W., Mackay, J. P., & Sunde, M. (2012). Self-assembly of functional, amphipathic amyloid monolayers by the fungal hydrophobin EAS. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(14). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1114052109

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