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A kinetic study of ovalbumin fibril formation: the importance of fragmentation and end-joining.


ABSTRACT: The ability to control the morphologies of biomolecular aggregates is a central objective in the study of self-assembly processes. The development of predictive models offers the surest route for gaining such control. Under the right conditions, proteins will self-assemble into fibers that may rearrange themselves even further to form diverse structures, including the formation of closed loops. In this study, chicken egg white ovalbumin is used as a model for the study of fibril loops. By monitoring the kinetics of self-assembly, we demonstrate that loop formation is a consequence of end-to-end association between protein fibrils. A model of fibril formation kinetics, including end-joining, is developed and solved, showing that end-joining has a distinct effect on the growth of fibrillar mass density (which can be measured experimentally), establishing a link between self-assembly kinetics and the underlying growth mechanism. These results will enable experimentalists to infer fibrillar morphologies from an appropriate analysis of self-assembly kinetic data.

SUBMITTER: Kalapothakis JM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4423071 | biostudies-literature | 2015 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A kinetic study of ovalbumin fibril formation: the importance of fragmentation and end-joining.

Kalapothakis Jason M D JM   Morris Ryan J RJ   Szavits-Nossan Juraj J   Eden Kym K   Covill Sam S   Tabor Sean S   Gillam Jay J   Barran Perdita E PE   Allen Rosalind J RJ   Allen Rosalind J RJ   MacPhee Cait E CE  

Biophysical journal 20150501 9


The ability to control the morphologies of biomolecular aggregates is a central objective in the study of self-assembly processes. The development of predictive models offers the surest route for gaining such control. Under the right conditions, proteins will self-assemble into fibers that may rearrange themselves even further to form diverse structures, including the formation of closed loops. In this study, chicken egg white ovalbumin is used as a model for the study of fibril loops. By monito  ...[more]

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