4.6 Article

Surface adsorption considerations when working with amyloid fibrils in multiwell plates and Eppendorf tubes

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 22, Issue 11, Pages 1531-1541

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pro.2339

Keywords

amyloid; fibril; amyloid disaggregation; Abeta; Alzheimer's disease; amyloid adsorption; thioflavin T

Funding

  1. NIH [AG031097]
  2. Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology
  3. Lita Annenberg Hazen Foundation
  4. Bruce Ford and Anne Smith Bundy Foundation
  5. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES), Brazil

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The accumulation of cross--sheet amyloid fibrils is the hallmark of amyloid diseases. Recently, we reported the discovery of amyloid disaggregase activities in extracts from mammalian cells and Caenorhabditis elegans. However, we have discovered a problem with the interpretation of our previous results as A disaggregation in vitro. Here, we show that A fibrils adsorb to the plastic surface of multiwell plates and Eppendorf tubes. This adsorption is markedly increased in the presence of complex biological mixtures subjected to a denaturing air-water interface. The time-dependent loss of thioflavin T fluorescence that we interpreted previously as disaggregation is due to increased adsorption of A amyloid to the surfaces of multiwell plates and Eppendorf tubes in the presence of biological extracts. As the proteins in biological extracts denature over time at the air-water interface due to agitation/shaking, their adsorption increases, in turn promoting adsorption of amyloid fibrils. We delineate important control experiments that quantify the extent of amyloid adsorption to the surface of plastic and quartz containers. Based on the results described in this article, we conclude that our interpretation of the kinetic fibril disaggregation assay data previously reported in Bieschke et al., Protein Sci 2009;18:2231-2241 and Murray et al., Protein Sci 2010;19:836-846 is invalid when used as evidence for a disaggregase activity. Thus, we correct the two prior publications reporting that worm or mammalian cell extracts disaggregate A amyloid fibrils in vitro at 37 degrees C (see Corrigenda in this issue of Protein Science). We apologize for misinterpreting our previous data and for any confounding experimental efforts this may have caused.

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