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Creators/Authors contains: "Jennings, Christian M"

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  1. Abstract Blood clotting is the body’s natural reaction in wound healing and is also the cause of many pathologies. Fibrin – the main protein in the clotting process provides clots’ mechanical strength by forming a scaffold of complex fibrin fibers. Fibrin fibers exhibit high extensibility and primarily elastic properties under static loading, which differ from in vivo dynamic forces. In many biological materials, the mechanical response changes under repeated loading/unloading (cyclic loading). Using lateral force microscopy, we show fibrin fibers possess viscoelastic behavior and experience irreversible damage under cyclic loading. Cross-linking results in a more rigid structure with permanent damage occurring mostly at larger strains, which is corroborated by computational modeling of fibrin extension using a hyperelastic model. Molecular spectroscopy analysis with broadband coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering spectroscopy in addition to molecular dynamic simulations allow identification of the source of damage, the unfolding pattern, and inter and intramolecular changes in fibrin. The results show partial recovery of protein’s secondary and tertiary structures under load, providing deeper understanding of fibrin’s unique behavior in wound healing or pathologies like stroke and embolism. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 9, 2026
  2. Abstract Age-dependent transition of metastable, liquid-like protein condensates to amyloid fibrils is an emergent phenomenon of numerous neurodegeneration-linked protein systems. A key question is whether the thermodynamic forces underlying reversible phase separation and maturation to irreversible amyloids are distinct and separable. Here, we address this question using an engineered version of the microtubule-associated protein Tau, which forms biochemically active condensates. Liquid-like Tau condensates exhibit rapid aging to amyloid fibrils under quiescent, cofactor-free conditions. Tau condensate interface promotes fibril nucleation, impairing their activity to recruit tubulin and catalyze microtubule assembly. Remarkably, a small molecule metabolite, L-arginine, selectively impedes condensate-to-fibril transition without perturbing phase separation in a valence and chemistry-specific manner. By heightening the fibril nucleation barrier, L-arginine counteracts age-dependent decline in the biochemical activity of Tau condensates. These results provide a proof-of-principle demonstration that small molecule metabolites can enhance the metastability of protein condensates against a liquid-to-amyloid transition, thereby preserving condensate function. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 19, 2026