Hierarchical Protofilament Intertwining Rules the Formation of Mixed-Curvature Amyloid Polymorphs.
Published version
Peer-reviewed
Repository URI
Repository DOI
Change log
Authors
Abstract
Amyloid polymorphism is a hallmark of almost all amyloid species, yet the mechanisms underlying the formation of amyloid polymorphs and their complex architectures remain elusive. Commonly, two main mesoscopic topologies are found in amyloid polymorphs characterized by non-zero Gaussian and mean curvatures: twisted ribbons and helical fibrils, respectively. Here, a rich heterogeneity of configurations is demonstrated on insulin amyloid fibrils, where protofilament packing can occur, besides the common polymorphs, also in a combined mode forming mixed-curvature polymorphs. Through AFM statistical analysis, an extended array of heterogeneous architectures that are rationalized by mesoscopic theoretical arguments are identified. Notably, an unusual fibrillization pathway is also unraveled toward mixed-curvature polymorphs via the widespread recruitment and intertwining of protofilaments and protofibrils. The results present an original view of amyloid polymorphism and advance the fundamental understanding of the fibrillization mechanism from single protofilaments into mature amyloid fibrils.
Description
Publication status: Published
Funder: Laboratory of Biological Electron Microscopy
Journal Title
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
2198-3844
Volume Title
Publisher
Publisher DOI
Rights and licensing
Sponsorship
MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033 and FSE + (RamónyCajalFellowship, ref.RYC2022‐037744‐I)

