Abstract

The aggregation of human islet amyloid polypeptides (hIAPP) to mature fibrils is considered as the main cause of type II diabetes. Therefore destroying the pre-formed hIAPP fibrils is expected to be a promising strategy for therapeutic treatments. In this work, the dissociation effects of graphene oxide (GO) nanosheets on hIAPP mature fibrils are investigated. The results clearly demonstrate that hIAPP fibrils can be quickly adsorbed on the GO surface and efficiently broken into short fragments. Meanwhile, the β-sheet structures of hIAPP fibrils are greatly destroyed. Particularly, in situ atomic force microscopy was applied to monitor the real-time interaction between hIAPP fibrils and GO nanosheets. It provides distinct evidence that the disruption of hIAPP fibrils by GO nanosheets mainly occurs at the GO edges. Size-dependent experiments further justify the interfere of edge contribution, which suggest small-sized GO nanosheets exhibit better dissociation ability than large-sized ones. Therefore, this study not only provides valuable information that GO nanosheets (especially small-sized ones) can act as efficient nanoblades to break hIAPP fibrils, but also suggests a powerful and widely available methodology for investigating real-time interaction between nanomaterials and biomolecules.

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