Human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) is known to misfold and aggregate into amyloid deposits that may be found in pancreatic tissues of patients affected by type 2 diabetes. Recent studies have shown that the highly amyloidogenic peptide LANFLVH, corresponding the N-terminal 12-18 region of IAPP, does not induce membrane damage. Here we assess the role played by the aromatic residue Phe in driving both amyloid formation and membrane interaction of LANFLVH. To this aim, a set of variant heptapeptides in which the aromatic residue Phe has been substituted with a Leu and Ala is studied. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and membrane-leakage experiments demonstrated that Phe substitution noticeably affects the peptide-induced changes in the thermotropic properties of the lipid bilayer but not its membrane damaging potential. Atomic force microscopy (AFM), ThT fluorescence and Congo red birefringence assays evidenced that the Phe residue is not required for fibrillogenesis, but it can influence the self-assembling kinetics. Molecular dynamics simulations have paralleled the outcome of the experimental trials also providing informative details about the structure of the different peptide assemblies. These results support a general theory suggesting that aromatic residues, although capable of affecting the self-assembly kinetics of small peptides and peptide-membrane interactions, are not essential either for amyloid formation or membrane leakage, and indicate that other factors such as β-sheet propensity, size and hydrophobicity of the side chain act synergistically to determine peptide properties.
Amylin is the 37-residue peptide hormone produced by the islet β-cells in the pancreas and the formation of amylin aggregates is strongly associated with β-cells degeneration in type 2 diabetes, as demonstrated by more than 95% of patients exhibiting amylin amyloid upon autopsy.It is widely recognized that metal ions such as copper(II) have been implicated in the aggregation process of amyloidogenic peptides such as Aβ and α-synuclein and there is evidence that also amylin self-assembly is largely affected by copper(II). For this reason, in this work, the role of copper(II) in the aggregation of amylin has been investigated by several different experimental approaches. Mass spectrometric investigations show that copper(II) induces significant changes in the amylin structure which decrease the protein fibrillogenesis as observed by ThT measurements. Accordingly, solid-state NMR experiments together with computational analysis carried out on a model amylin fragment confirmed the non fibrillogenic nature of the copper(II) induced aggregated structure. Finally, the presence of copper(II) is also shown to have a major influence on amylin proneness to be degraded by proteases and cytotoxicity studies on different cell cultures are reported.4
A novel anticancer vaccine candidate built on a nonpeptidic scaffold has been synthesized. Four S-Tn tumor-associated glycomimetic antigens have been clustered onto a calix[4]arene scaffold bearing an immunoadjuvant moiety (P3CS). The immunogenicity of the synthetic construct has been investigated by immunization of mice in vivo. ELISA assay has evidenced that the tetravalent construct stimulates a higher production of anti-Tn antigen IgG antibodies when compared to an analogous monovalent compound. This result is ascribable to an antigen cluster effect and makes the reported vaccine candidate a good mimic of the natural motifs present on the mucine surface.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.