Permeabilization of Lipid Bilayers Is a Common Conformation-dependent Activity of Soluble Amyloid Oligomers in Protein Misfolding Diseases
University of California, Irvine
Abstract
Amyloid fibrillization is multistep process involving soluble oligomeric intermediates, including spherical oligomers and protofibrils. Amyloid oligomers have a common, generic structure, and they are intrinsically toxic to cells, even when formed from non-disease related proteins, which implies they also share a common mechanism of pathogenesis and toxicity. Here we report that soluble oligomers from several types of amyloids specifically increase lipid bilayer conductance regardless of the sequence, while fibrils and soluble low molecular weight species have no effect. The increase in membrane conductance occurs without any evidence of discrete channel or pore formation or ion selectivity. The conductance is…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Oligomer
- Chemistry
- Lipid bilayer
- Fibril
- Amyloid (mycology)
- Biophysics
- Conductance
- Amyloid disease