Monitoring and Inhibition of Insulin Fibrillation by a Small Organic Fluorogen with Aggregation-Induced Emission Characteristics

Yuning Hong(University of Hong Kong), Luming Meng(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Sijie Chen(Institute of Molecular Functional Materials), Chris Wai Tung Leung(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Lin‐Tai Da(University of Hong Kong), Faisal Mahtab(Institute of Molecular Functional Materials), Daniel‐Adriano Silva(Institute of Molecular Functional Materials), Jianzhao Liu(University of Hong Kong), Jacky W. Y. Lam(University of Hong Kong), Xuhui Huang(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Ben Zhong Tang(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)
Journal of the American Chemical Society
December 16, 2011
Cited by 391

Abstract

Amyloid fibrillation of proteins is associated with a great variety of pathologic conditions. Development of new molecules that can monitor amyloidosis kinetics and inhibit fibril formation is of great diagnostic and therapeutic value. In this work, we have developed a biocompatible molecule that functions as an ex situ monitor and an in situ inhibitor for protein fibrillation, using insulin as a model protein. 1,2-Bis[4-(3-sulfonatopropoxyl)phenyl]-1,2-diphenylethene salt (BSPOTPE) is nonemissive when it is dissolved with native insulin in an incubation buffer but starts to fluoresce when it is mixed with preformed insulin fibril, enabling ex situ monitoring of amyloidogenesis kinetics and high-contrast fluorescence imaging of protein fibrils. Premixing BSPOTPE with insulin, on the other hand, inhibits the nucleation process and impedes the protofibril formation. Increasing the dose of BSPOTPE boosts its inhibitory potency. Theoretical modeling using molecular dynamics simulations and docking reveals that BSPOTPE is prone to binding to partially unfolded insulin through hydrophobic interaction of the phenyl rings of BSPOTPE with the exposed hydrophobic residues of insulin. Such binding is assumed to have stabilized the partially unfolded insulin and obstructed the formation of the critical oligomeric species in the protein fibrillogenesis process.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis