4.8 Article

Water Rearrangements upon Disorder-to-Order Amyloid Transition

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 7, Issue 20, Pages 4105-4110

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.6b02088

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Funding

  1. IISER Mohali
  2. IIT Bombay
  3. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
  4. Science and Engineering Research Board
  5. Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India

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Water plays a critical role in governing the intricate balance between chain-chain and chain-solvent interactions during protein folding, misfolding, and aggregation. Previous studies have indicated the presence of different types of water in folded (globular) proteins. In this work, using femtosecond and picosecond time resolved fluorescence measurements, we have characterized the solvation dynamics from ultrafast to ultraslow time scale both in the monomeric state and in the amyloid state of an intrinsically disordered protein, namely kappa-casein. Monomeric kappa-casein adopts a compact disordered state under physiological conditions and is capable of spontaneously aggregating into highly ordered beta-rich amyloid fibrils. Our results indicate that the mobility of biological water (type I) gets restrained as a result of conformational sequestration during amyloid formation. Additionally, a significant decrease in the bulk water component with a concomitant increase in the ultraslow component revealed the ordering of trapped interstitial water (type II) upon disorder-to-order amyloid transition. Our results provide an experimental underpinning of significant water rearrangements associated with both chain desolvation and water confinement upon amyloid formation.

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