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Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport/proceedingBidrag til bog/antologiForskningpeer review

Standard

Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils. / Ghodke, Shirin D; Jensen, Grethe Vestergaard; Svane, Anna Sigrid P. et al.

Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation. red. / Vladimir Uversky; Yuri Lyubchenko. Elsevier, 2014. s. 373-386.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport/proceedingBidrag til bog/antologiForskningpeer review

Harvard

Ghodke, SD, Jensen, GV, Svane, ASP, Weise, K, Søndergaard, A, Behrens, MA, Pedersen, JS, Nielsen, NC, Pedersen, JS, Winter, R & Otzen, D 2014, Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils. i V Uversky & Y Lyubchenko (red), Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation. Elsevier, s. 373-386. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

APA

Ghodke, S. D., Jensen, G. V., Svane, A. S. P., Weise, K., Søndergaard, A., Behrens, M. A., Pedersen, J. S., Nielsen, N. C., Pedersen, J. S., Winter, R., & Otzen, D. (2014). Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils. I V. Uversky, & Y. Lyubchenko (red.), Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation (s. 373-386). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

CBE

Ghodke SD, Jensen GV, Svane ASP, Weise K, Søndergaard A, Behrens MA, Pedersen JS, Nielsen NC, Pedersen JS, Winter R, et al. 2014. Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils. Uversky V, Lyubchenko Y, red. I Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation. Elsevier. s. 373-386. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

MLA

Ghodke, Shirin D et al. "Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils". og Uversky, Vladimir Lyubchenko, Yuri (red.). Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation. Kapitel 34, Elsevier. 2014, 373-386. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

Vancouver

Ghodke SD, Jensen GV, Svane ASP, Weise K, Søndergaard A, Behrens MA et al. Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils. I Uversky V, Lyubchenko Y, red., Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation. Elsevier. 2014. s. 373-386 doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

Author

Ghodke, Shirin D ; Jensen, Grethe Vestergaard ; Svane, Anna Sigrid P. et al. / Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils. Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation. red. / Vladimir Uversky ; Yuri Lyubchenko. Elsevier, 2014. s. 373-386

Bibtex

@inbook{d6cd022e5e264050ad39d3e8f2114227,
title = "Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils",
abstract = "The natively unfolded peptide hormone glucagon forms fibrillar structures with amyloid properties. Here, we summarize past advances in glucagon fibrillation and combine them with recent new unpublished data to provide some more general conclusions on how glucagon fibrillation adapts to different physicochemical conditions such as high temperature, pressure, mechanical and chemical stress. Factors such as peptide concentration, accessible surface area, surface hydration of the glucagon molecular state, contact surface, temperature and ionic strength all contribute to fibrillar structure and stability. In addition to fundamental changes in secondary structure, glucagon fibril morphology can vary at two macroscopic levels, namely, the degree of association (three-filament fibrils form under quiescent conditions, and two-filament fibrils form with vigorous shaking) and the type of association (twisted fibrils at low temperature, rod-like bundled fibrils at higher temperatures). Laterally bundled fibrils are presumably more stable because of the larger effective contact area. Polymorphism also opens up for interconversion of different fibril types: the low temperature fibrils can convert to a more stable fibril upon incubation at elevated temperatures (but not vice versa), indicating that fibrils are fundamentally malleable if they have not attained the most stable fibrillar state. While the effect of pressure on glucagon is complex (accelerating fibrillation at intermediate pressures and decelerating it at higher pressures), the thermal expansion coefficients obtained from these studies agree well with our previous calorimetric studies to reveal reduced or increased hydration of fibrils (leading to reduced or increased stability) depending on fibrillation conditions. Finally, we report that the cyclodextrin kleptose retards glucagon fibrillation but without interfering fundamentally with the monomer–oligomer equilibrium.",
author = "Ghodke, {Shirin D} and Jensen, {Grethe Vestergaard} and Svane, {Anna Sigrid P.} and Katrin Weise and Anne S{\o}ndergaard and Behrens, {Manja Annette} and Pedersen, {Jan Skov} and Nielsen, {Niels Christian} and Pedersen, {Jesper S{\o}ndergaard} and Roland Winter and Daniel Otzen",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0-12-394431-3",
pages = "373--386",
editor = "Vladimir Uversky and Yuri Lyubchenko",
booktitle = "Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Polymorphism, metastable species and interconversion: the many states of glucagon fibrils

AU - Ghodke, Shirin D

AU - Jensen, Grethe Vestergaard

AU - Svane, Anna Sigrid P.

AU - Weise, Katrin

AU - Søndergaard, Anne

AU - Behrens, Manja Annette

AU - Pedersen, Jan Skov

AU - Nielsen, Niels Christian

AU - Pedersen, Jesper Søndergaard

AU - Winter, Roland

AU - Otzen, Daniel

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The natively unfolded peptide hormone glucagon forms fibrillar structures with amyloid properties. Here, we summarize past advances in glucagon fibrillation and combine them with recent new unpublished data to provide some more general conclusions on how glucagon fibrillation adapts to different physicochemical conditions such as high temperature, pressure, mechanical and chemical stress. Factors such as peptide concentration, accessible surface area, surface hydration of the glucagon molecular state, contact surface, temperature and ionic strength all contribute to fibrillar structure and stability. In addition to fundamental changes in secondary structure, glucagon fibril morphology can vary at two macroscopic levels, namely, the degree of association (three-filament fibrils form under quiescent conditions, and two-filament fibrils form with vigorous shaking) and the type of association (twisted fibrils at low temperature, rod-like bundled fibrils at higher temperatures). Laterally bundled fibrils are presumably more stable because of the larger effective contact area. Polymorphism also opens up for interconversion of different fibril types: the low temperature fibrils can convert to a more stable fibril upon incubation at elevated temperatures (but not vice versa), indicating that fibrils are fundamentally malleable if they have not attained the most stable fibrillar state. While the effect of pressure on glucagon is complex (accelerating fibrillation at intermediate pressures and decelerating it at higher pressures), the thermal expansion coefficients obtained from these studies agree well with our previous calorimetric studies to reveal reduced or increased hydration of fibrils (leading to reduced or increased stability) depending on fibrillation conditions. Finally, we report that the cyclodextrin kleptose retards glucagon fibrillation but without interfering fundamentally with the monomer–oligomer equilibrium.

AB - The natively unfolded peptide hormone glucagon forms fibrillar structures with amyloid properties. Here, we summarize past advances in glucagon fibrillation and combine them with recent new unpublished data to provide some more general conclusions on how glucagon fibrillation adapts to different physicochemical conditions such as high temperature, pressure, mechanical and chemical stress. Factors such as peptide concentration, accessible surface area, surface hydration of the glucagon molecular state, contact surface, temperature and ionic strength all contribute to fibrillar structure and stability. In addition to fundamental changes in secondary structure, glucagon fibril morphology can vary at two macroscopic levels, namely, the degree of association (three-filament fibrils form under quiescent conditions, and two-filament fibrils form with vigorous shaking) and the type of association (twisted fibrils at low temperature, rod-like bundled fibrils at higher temperatures). Laterally bundled fibrils are presumably more stable because of the larger effective contact area. Polymorphism also opens up for interconversion of different fibril types: the low temperature fibrils can convert to a more stable fibril upon incubation at elevated temperatures (but not vice versa), indicating that fibrils are fundamentally malleable if they have not attained the most stable fibrillar state. While the effect of pressure on glucagon is complex (accelerating fibrillation at intermediate pressures and decelerating it at higher pressures), the thermal expansion coefficients obtained from these studies agree well with our previous calorimetric studies to reveal reduced or increased hydration of fibrils (leading to reduced or increased stability) depending on fibrillation conditions. Finally, we report that the cyclodextrin kleptose retards glucagon fibrillation but without interfering fundamentally with the monomer–oligomer equilibrium.

U2 - 10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

DO - 10.1016/B978-0-12-394431-3.00034-1

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-0-12-394431-3

SP - 373

EP - 386

BT - Bio-nanoimaging: Protein misfolding and aggregation

A2 - Uversky, Vladimir

A2 - Lyubchenko, Yuri

PB - Elsevier

ER -