Real-time probing of β-amyloid self-assembly and inhibition using fluorescence self-quenching between neighbouring dyesElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Details of aggregation protocols, steady-state and time-resolved measurements, transmission electron microscopy characterization and Fig. S1-S10 and Tables S1-S6. See DOI: 10.1039/c3mb70272c

The fluorescence response of the Thioflavin-T (ThT) dye and derivatives has become the standard tool for detecting β-amyloid aggregates (Aβ) in solution. However, it is accepted that ThT-based methods suffer from important drawbacks. Some of these are due to the cationic structure of ThT, which limi...

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Hauptverfasser: Quinn, Steven D, Dalgarno, Paul A, Cameron, Ryan T, Hedley, Gordon J, Hacker, Christian, Lucocq, John M, Baillie, George S, Samuel, Ifor D. W, Penedo, J. Carlos
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Zusammenfassung:The fluorescence response of the Thioflavin-T (ThT) dye and derivatives has become the standard tool for detecting β-amyloid aggregates (Aβ) in solution. However, it is accepted that ThT-based methods suffer from important drawbacks. Some of these are due to the cationic structure of ThT, which limits its application at slightly acidic conditions; whereas some limitations are related to the general use of an extrinsic-dye sensing strategy and its intrinsic requirement for the formation of a sensor-binding site during the aggregation process. Here, we introduce fluorescence-self-quenching (FSQ) between N-terminally tagged peptides as a strategy to overcome some of these limitations. Using a combination of steady-state, picosecond time-resolved fluorescence and transmission electron microscopy, we characterize the fluorescence response of HiLyte fluor 555-labelled Aβ peptides and demonstrate that Aβ self-assembly organizes the covalently attached probes in close proximity to trigger the self-quenching sensing process over a broad range of conditions. Importantly, we prove that N-terminal tagging of β-amyloid peptides does not alter the self-assembly kinetics or the resulting aggregated structures. We also tested the ability of FSQ-based methods to monitor the inhibition of Aβ 1-42 aggregation using the small heat-shock protein Hsp20 as a model system. Overall, FSQ-based strategies for amyloid-sensing fill the gap between current morphology-specific protocols using extrinsic dyes, and highly-specialized single-molecule techniques that are difficult to implement in high-throughput analytical determinations. When performed in Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) format, the method becomes a ratiometric platform to gain insights into amyloid structure and for standardizing in vitro studies of amyloid aggregation. A fluorescence self-quenching (FSQ) approach between β-amyloid peptides labelled at the N-terminal position demonstrates excellent performance to monitor in real-time the self-assembly mechanism across a wide range of experimental conditions.
ISSN:1742-206X
1742-2051
DOI:10.1039/c3mb70272c