We report an experimental study on the model protein Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA), with the aim of elucidating
the mechanisms by which a fully folded globular protein undergoes different aggregation pathways
leading to the formation of amyloid fibrils or amorphous aggregates. We observe thermally induced
formation of fibrillar structures at pH far from the protein isoelectric point. The increase of electrostatic
repulsion results in protein destabilization and in modifications of inter and intra-molecular interactions
leading to the growth of fibril-like aggregates stabilized by inter-molecular-b sheets. The aggregation
kinetics is studied by means of fluorescence techniques, light scattering, Circular Dichroism (CD), infrared
spectroscopy (FTIR) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). Changes in protein secondary structures turn
out to be the driving mechanism of the observed aggregation and they progress in parallel with the
growth of Thioflavin T emission intensity and scattering signal. This concurrent behavior suggests a
mutual stabilization of elongated protofibril-like structures and of protein conformational and structural
changes, which lead to a more rigid and ordered structures. Our results give new insights on BSA selfassembly
process in alkaline conditions clearly providing new pieces of evidences of the interplay of several
and interconnected mechanisms occurring on different time and length scales
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