607096 Functionalized Mesoporous Silicas Direct Structural Polymorphism of Amyloid-β Fibrils

Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Forum (22) (PreRecorded+)
Henry Pan1, Michael Lucas1, Eric Verbeke2, Lauren Webb3, David W. Taylor4 and Benjamin K. Keitz1, (1)McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, (2)Department of Molecular Biosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, (3)Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, (4)Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX

The aggregation of Amyloid-β (Aβ) is associated with the onset of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and involves a complex kinetic pathway as monomers self-assemble into fibrils. A central feature of amyloid fibrils is the existence of multiple structural polymorphs, which complicates the development of disease-relevant structure-function relationships. Developing these relationships requires new methods to control fibril structure. In this work, we demonstrate that mesoporous silicas (SBA-15) functionalized with hydrophobic (SBA-PFDTS) and hydrophilic groups (SBA-PEG) direct the aggregation kinetics and resulting structure of Aβ1-40 fibrils. The hydrophilic SBA-PEG had little effect on amyloid kinetics while as-synthesized and hydrophobic SBA-PFDTS accelerated aggregation kinetics. Subsequently, we quantified the relative population of fibril structures formed in the presence of each material using electron microscopy. Fibrils formed from Aβ1-40 exposed to SBA-PEG were structurally similar to control fibrils. In contrast, Aβ1-40 incubated with SBA-15 or SBA-PFDTS formed fibrils with shorter cross-over distances that were more structurally representative of fibrils found in AD patient-derived samples. Overall, these results suggest that mesoporous silicas and other exogenous materials are promising scaffolds for the de novo production of specific fibril polymorphs of Aβ1-40 and other amyloidogenic proteins.

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See more of this Session: Biomimetic Structures and Biomolecular Self-Assembly
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