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arxiv: 1410.6780 · v2 · pith:5OOBDRZBnew · submitted 2014-10-24 · 🧬 q-bio.BM · cond-mat.soft· physics.bio-ph

Adsorption at Liquid Interfaces Induces Amyloid Fibril Bending and Ring Formation

classification 🧬 q-bio.BM cond-mat.softphysics.bio-ph
keywords fibrilfibrilsinterfacesbetacurvaturelactoglobulinmicroscopyrings
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Protein fibril accumulation at interfaces is an important step in many physiological processes and neurodegenerative diseases as well as in designing materials. Here we show, using $\beta$-lactoglobulin fibrils as a model, that semiflexible fibrils exposed to a surface do not possess the Gaussian distribution of curvatures characteristic for wormlike chains, but instead exhibit a spontaneous curvature, which can even lead to ring-like conformations. The long-lived presence of such rings is confirmed by atomic force microscopy, cryogenic scanning electron microscopy and passive probe particle tracking at air- and oil-water interfaces. We reason that this spontaneous curvature is governed by structural characteristics on the molecular level and is to be expected when a chiral and polar fibril is placed in an inhomogeneous environment such as an interface. By testing $\beta$-lactoglobulin fibrils with varying average thicknesses, we conclude that fibril thickness plays a determining role in the propensity to form rings.

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