Abstract

Formation of amyloid fibrils in vivo has been linked to disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and prion-associated transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. One of the characteristic features of amyloid fibrils is the high thermodynamic stability relative both to native and disordered states which is also thought to underlie the perplexingly remarkable heat resistance of prion infectivity. Here, we are comparing high-temperature degradation of native and fibrillar forms of human insulin. Decomposition of insulin amyloid has been studied under helium atmosphere and in the temperature range from ambient conditions to 750°C using thermogravimetry and differential scanning calorimetry coupled to mass spectrometry. While converting native insulin into amyloid does upshift onset of thermal decomposition by ca. 75°C, fibrils remain vulnerable to covalent degradation at temperatures below 300°C, as reflected by mass spectra of gases released upon heating of amyloid samples, as well as morphology and infrared spectra of fibrils subjected to incubation at 250°C. Mass spectra profiles of released gases indicate that degradation of fibrils is much more cooperative than degradation of native insulin. The data show no evidence of water of crystallization trapped within insulin fibrils. We have also compared untreated and heated amyloid samples in terms of capacity to seed daughter fibrils. Kinetic traces of seed-induced insulin fibrillation have shown that the seeding potency of amyloid samples decreases significantly already after exposure to 200°C, even though corresponding electron micrographs indicated persisting fibrillar morphology. Our results suggest that amyloid-based biological activity may not survive extremely high temperature treatments, at least in the absence of other stabilizing factors.

Highlights

  • Association of misfolded globular proteins may lead to the emergence of highly ordered b-sheet-rich linear aggregates, socalled amyloid fibrils

  • Presence of amyloid deposits in human tissues has long been linked to several degenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s diseases and the prionassociated Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSEs) including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease [1,2,3]

  • Insulin amyloid fibrils were obtained through a quiescent incubation of 1 wt. % insulin solution in 0.1 M NaCl in H2O, pH 1.9 at 65uC for 24 h

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Summary

Introduction

Association of misfolded globular proteins may lead to the emergence of highly ordered b-sheet-rich linear aggregates, socalled amyloid fibrils. As no biological matrix is expected to survive such an extreme thermal treatment, the authors argued that the prion amyloid undergoes high-temperature-induced mineralization and converts into inorganic heat-resistant template capable of imprinting and spreading pathogenic isoforms of PrPC (normal cellular isoform of prion protein). Such hypothetical process could pass structural features of the organic prion to its inorganic replica only on a rather ‘‘low-resolution’’ morphological level – i.e. even if the fibril’s shape were retained throughout, surface chemical groups of amino acid side chains would vanish. Insulin has proved to be an insightful model for studies on protein aggregation [28,29,30] including certain aspects of prion-like polymorphism of amyloid fibrils [14,31]

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