1 research outputs found
Molecular Rotors Provide Insights into Microscopic Structural Changes During Protein Aggregation
Changes in microscopic
viscosity represent an important characteristic
of structural transitions in soft matter systems. Here we demonstrate
the use of molecular rotors to explore the changes in microrheology
accompanying the transition of proteins from their soluble states
into a gel phase composed of amyloid fibrils. The formation of beta-sheet
rich protein aggregates, including amyloid fibrils, is a hallmark
of a number of neurodegenerative disorders, and as such, the mechanistic
details of this process are actively sought after. In our experiments,
molecular rotors report an increase in rigidity of approximately three
orders of magnitude during the aggregation reaction. Moreover, phasor
analysis of the fluorescence decay signal from the molecular rotors
suggests the presence of multiple distinct mechanistic stages during
the aggregation process. Our results show that molecular rotors can
reveal key microrheological features of protein systems not observable
through classical fluorescent probes operating in light switch mode