Department of Applied Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e54541. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054541. Epub 2013 Jan 17.
An apparatus that combines dynamic light scattering and Thioflavin T fluorescence detection is used to simultaneously probe fibril formation in polyglutamine peptides, the aggregating subunit associated with Huntington's disease, in vitro. Huntington's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder in a class of human pathologies that includes Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. These pathologies are all related by the propensity of their associated protein or polypeptide to form insoluble, β-sheet rich, amyloid fibrils. Despite the wide range of amino acid sequence in the aggregation prone polypeptides associated with these diseases, the resulting amyloids display strikingly similar physical structure, an observation which suggests a physical basis for amyloid fibril formation. Thioflavin T fluorescence reports β-sheet fibril content while dynamic light scattering measures particle size distributions. The combined techniques allow elucidation of complex aggregation kinetics and are used to reveal multiple stages of amyloid fibril formation.
一种将动态光散射和硫黄素 T 荧光检测相结合的仪器,用于在体外同时探测与亨廷顿病相关的多聚谷氨酰胺肽的纤维形成。亨廷顿病是一类人类病理学中的神经退行性疾病,包括阿尔茨海默病和帕金森病。这些病理学都与它们相关的蛋白质或多肽形成不溶性、富含β-折叠的淀粉样纤维的倾向有关。尽管与这些疾病相关的易于聚集的多肽的氨基酸序列范围很广,但产生的淀粉样纤维显示出惊人相似的物理结构,这一观察结果表明了淀粉样纤维形成的物理基础。硫黄素 T 荧光报告β-折叠纤维含量,而动态光散射则测量颗粒大小分布。这些联合技术可以阐明复杂的聚集动力学,并用于揭示淀粉样纤维形成的多个阶段。