Abstract

Finding new optical probes to detect and track amyloid protein aggregates is key to understanding and defeating the myriad of neurodegenerative and other diseases associated with these misfolded proteins. Herein we report that a series of fluorescent, soluble oligo(p-phenylene ethynylene)s (OPEs) are able to detect amyloids in vitro by massive binding-activated superluminescence, with low micromolar affinity and high selectivity for the amyloid conformer. The OPEs track the kinetics of amyloid fibril formation from native hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) similarly to thioflavin T (ThT), and the dependence of binding affinity on OPE length supports the theory of a linear binding groove. We hypothesize, based on spectral properties, induced circular dichroism, and previous work in analogous systems, that the fluorescence turn-on mechanism is a combination of the reduction of static solvent-mediated quenching at the ethyl ester end groups of the phenylene ethynylene fluorophore and the formation of chiral J-type aggregates templated on the amyloid fibril surface.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call