Influence of Urea and Dimethyl Sulfoxide on K-Peptide Fibrillation.
Jarosław WawerJakub KarczewskiRobert AranowskiRafał PiątekDanuta Augustin-NowackaPiotr BruździakPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Protein fibrillation leads to formation of amyloids-linear aggregates that are hallmarks of many serious diseases, including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. In this work, we investigate the fibrillation of a short peptide (K-peptide) from the amyloidogenic core of hen egg white lysozyme in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide or urea. During the studies, a variety of spectroscopic methods were used: fluorescence spectroscopy and the Thioflavin T assay, circular dichroism, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, optical density measurements, dynamic light scattering and intrinsic fluorescence. Additionally, the presence of amyloids was confirmed by atomic force microscopy. The obtained results show that the K-peptide is highly prone to form fibrillar aggregates. The measurements also confirm the weak impact of dimethyl sulfoxide on peptide fibrillation and distinct influence of urea. We believe that the K-peptide has higher amyloidogenic propensity than the whole protein, i.e., hen egg white lysozyme, most likely due to the lack of the first step of amyloidogenesis-partial unfolding of the native structure. Urea influences the second step of K-peptide amyloidogenesis, i.e., folding into amyloids.