Covalent Linkage and Macrocylization Preserve and Enhance Synergistic Interactions in Catalytic Amyloids

The self-assembly of short peptides into catalytic amyloid-like nanomaterials has proven to be a powerful tool in both understanding the evolution of early proteins and identifying new catalysts for practically useful chemical reactions. Here we demonstrate that both parallel and antiparallel arrang...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology 2020-09, Vol.22 (3)
Hauptverfasser: Lengyel‐Zhand, Zsofia, Marshall, Liam R., Jung, Maximilian, Jayachandran, Megha, Kim, Min‐Chul, Kriews, Austin, Makhlynets, Olga V., Fry, H. Christopher, Geyer, Armin, Korendovych, Ivan V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The self-assembly of short peptides into catalytic amyloid-like nanomaterials has proven to be a powerful tool in both understanding the evolution of early proteins and identifying new catalysts for practically useful chemical reactions. Here we demonstrate that both parallel and antiparallel arrangements of beta-sheets can accommodate metal ions in catalytically productive coordination environments. Moreover, synergistic relationships, identified in catalytic amyloid mixtures, can be captured in macrocyclic and sheet-loop-sheet species, that offer faster rates of assembly and provide more complex asymmetric arrangements of functional groups, thus paving the way for future designs of amyloid-like catalytic proteins. Finally, our findings show how initial catalytic activity in amyloid assemblies can be propagated and improved in more-complex molecules, providing another link in a complex evolutionary chain between short, potentially abiotically produced peptides and modern-day enzymes.
ISSN:1439-4227
1439-7633