The origin of in vitro amyloid fibril
polymorphs
is debated, in part, because few techniques can simultaneously monitor
the formation kinetics of multiple amyloid polymorphs. Using a cross-peak
specific polarization scheme, ⟨0°,0°,60°,–60°⟩,
we resolve 22 previously unseen cross peaks in the 2D IR spectra of
amyloid fibrils formed by the human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP).
Those cross peaks include a subset assigned to a second fibril polymorph,
which forms on a slower time scale. We simulated the data with three
different kinetic models for polymorph formation. Only a model based
on secondary nucleation reproduces the cross peak kinetics. These
experiments are evidence that fibrils formed by secondary nucleation
have a different polymorphic structure than the parent fibrils and
illustrate the enhanced structural resolution of this new cross peak
specific polarization scheme