Authors
Kateri F DuBay, Amol P Pawar, Fabrizio Chiti, Jesús Zurdo, Christopher M Dobson, Michele Vendruscolo
Publication date
2004/8/27
Journal
Journal of molecular biology
Volume
341
Issue
5
Pages
1317-1326
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Protein aggregation is associated with a variety of pathological conditions, including Alzheimer's and Creutzfeldt-Jakob diseases and type II diabetes. Such degenerative disorders result from the conversion of the normal soluble state of specific proteins into aggregated states that can ultimately form the characteristic amyloid fibrils found in diseased tissue. Under appropriate conditions it appears that many, perhaps all, proteins can be converted in vitro into amyloid fibrils. The aggregation propensities of different polypeptide chains have, however, been observed to vary substantially. Here, we describe an approach that uses the knowledge of the amino acid sequence and of the experimental conditions to reproduce, with a correlation coefficient of 0.92 and over five orders of magnitude, the in vitro aggregation rates of a wide range of unstructured peptides and proteins. These results indicate that the formation of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KF DuBay, AP Pawar, F Chiti, J Zurdo, CM Dobson… - Journal of molecular biology, 2004