Probing supramolecular protein assembly using covalently attached fluorescent molecular rotors
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2017
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Elsevier
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Kubánková M, López-Duarte I, Bull JA, Vadukul DM, Serpell LC, De Saint Victor M, et al. Probing supramolecular protein assembly using covalently attached fluorescent molecular rotors. Biomaterials [Internet]. septiembre de 2017 [citado 17 de enero de 2025];139:195-201. Disponible en: https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0142961217304027
Abstract
Changes in microscopic viscosity and macromolecular crowding accompany the transition of proteins
from their monomeric forms into highly organised fibrillar states. Previously, we have demonstrated that
viscosity sensitive fluorophores termed ‘molecular rotors’, when freely mixed with monomers of interest,
are able to report on changes in microrheology accompanying amyloid formation, and measured an
increase in rigidity of approximately three orders of magnitude during aggregation of lysozyme and
insulin. Here we extend this strategy by covalently attaching molecular rotors to several proteins capable
of assembly into fibrils, namely lysozyme, fibrinogen and amyloid-b peptide (Ab(1e42)). We demonstrate that upon covalent attachment the molecular rotors can successfully probe supramolecular assembly in vitro. Importantly, our new strategy has wider applications in cellulo and in vivo, since
covalently attached molecular rotors can be successfully delivered in situ and will colocalise with the
aggregating protein, for example inside live cells. This important advantage allowed us to follow the
microscopic viscosity changes accompanying blood clotting and during Ab(1e42) aggregation in live SHSY5Y cells. Our results demonstrate that covalently attached molecular rotors are a widely applicable tool
to study supramolecular protein assembly and can reveal microrheological features of aggregating
protein systems both in vitro and in cellulo not observable through classical fluorescent probes operating
in light switch mode.