Abstract Amyloid protein aggregation is associated with many neurodegenerative diseases, including amyloid‐β (Aβ)in Alzheimer disease, human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) in type II diabetes, and human calcitonin (hCT) in medullary thyroid carcinoma. Significant efforts have been made to develop different diagnostic and prevention strategies for the early detection and intervention of these disease‐causative protein aggregates. However, conventional design wisdoms are mostly limited to the molecules with either single function (amyloid imaging or amyloid prevention) or single targeting protein (Aβ, hIAPP, or hCT). Here, a rational design strategy of an amyloid‐aggregation‐induced emission (AIE)‐active molecule is demonstrated by conjugating an amyloid fragment of GNNQQNY (G7) with an AIE fluorescent molecule of triphenylvinyl benzoic acid (namely, G7‐TBA), making G7‐TBA as multiple‐target, dual‐function, amyloid probes and amyloid modulators for detecting, monitoring, and altering amyloid aggregation of three different amyloid proteins (Aβ, hIAPP, and hCT). G7‐TBA probe shows conformationally specific binding affinities to amyloid aggregates, switching from an “off” state (low fluorescence) for amyloid monomers to an “on” state (high fluorescence) for β‐structure‐rich amyloid oligomers and fibrils in aqueous solution. Further surface immobilization of TBA probes on surface plasmon resonance surfaces allows to amplify detection sensitivity and binding affinity to amyloid aggregates formed at different aggregation stages. G7‐TBA as amyloid modulator enables acceleration of amyloid fibrillization and selectively protects cells from hIAPP‐induced toxicity. The distinct amyloid detection and modulation of G7‐TBA are essentially derived from the cross‐seeding between G7 and amyloid aggregation via β‐structure interaction, which by far exceed the binding affinity between commercial ThT and amyloid aggregates. Such design concepts of amyloid‐AIE conjugates can be further explored as multiple‐function and target probes and/or modulators for biomedical applications.
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This content will become publicly available on December 1, 2025
Competition between inside-out unfolding and pathogenic aggregation in an amyloid-forming β-propeller
Abstract Studies of folded-to-misfolded transitions using model protein systems reveal a range of unfolding needed for exposure of amyloid-prone regions for subsequent fibrillization. Here, we probe the relationship between unfolding and aggregation for glaucoma-associated myocilin. Mutations within the olfactomedin domain of myocilin (OLF) cause a gain-of-function, namely cytotoxic intracellular aggregation, which hastens disease progression. Aggregation by wild-type OLF (OLFWT) competes with its chemical unfolding, but only below the threshold where OLF loses tertiary structure. Representative moderate (OLFD380A) and severe (OLFI499F) disease variants aggregate differently, with rates comparable to OLFWTin initial stages of unfolding, and variants adopt distinct partially folded structures seen along the OLFWTurea-unfolding pathway. Whether initiated with mutation or chemical perturbation, unfolding propagates outward to the propeller surface. In sum, for this large protein prone to amyloid formation, the requirement for a conformational change to promote amyloid fibrillization leads to direct competition between unfolding and aggregation.
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- PAR ID:
- 10537424
- Publisher / Repository:
- PubMed
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Nature Communications
- Volume:
- 15
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2041-1723
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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