Kinetic Analysis Reveals the Role of Secondary Nucleation in Regenerated Silk Fibroin Self-Assembly

被引:7
|
作者
Kamada, Ayaka [1 ,2 ]
Toprakcioglu, Zenon [1 ]
Knowles, Tuomas P. J. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Chem, Cambridge CB2 1EW, England
[2] Xampla Ltd, BioInnovat Bldg,25 Cambridge Sci Pk Rd, Cambridge CB4 0FW, England
[3] Univ Cambridge, Cavendish Lab, Cambridge CB3 0FE, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会; 欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
CONFORMATION TRANSITION; PROTEIN AGGREGATION; SPIDROIN; SPIDER; SHEAR; SPECTROSCOPY; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.1021/acs.biomac.2c01479
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Silk proteins obtained from the Bombyx mori silkworm have been extensively studied due to their remarkable mechanical properties. One of the major structural components of this complex material is silk fibroin, which can be isolated and processed further in vitro to form artificial functional materials. Due to the excellent biocompatibility and rich self-assembly behavior, there has been sustained interest in such materials formed through the assembly of regenerated silk fibroin feedstocks. The molecular mechanisms by which the soluble regenerated fibroin molecules self-assemble into protein nanofibrils remain, however, largely unknown. Here, we use the framework of chemical kinetics to connect macroscopic measurements of regenerated silk fibroin self-assembly to the underlying microscopic mechanisms. Our results reveal that the aggregation of regenerated silk fibroin is dominated by a nonclassical secondary nucleation processes, where the formation of new fibrils is catalyzed by the existing aggregates in an autocatalytic manner. Such secondary nucleation pathways were originally discovered in the context of polymerization of disease-associated proteins, but the present results demonstrate that this pathway can also occur in functional assembly. Furthermore, our results show that shear flow induces the formation of nuclei, which subsequently accelerate the process of aggregation through an autocatalytic amplification driven by the secondary nucleation pathway. Taken together, these results allow us to identify the parameters governing the kinetics of regenerated silk fibroin self-assembly and expand our current understanding of the spinning of bioinspired protein-based fibers, which have a wide range of applications in materials science.
引用
收藏
页码:1709 / 1716
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Global analysis of kinetics reveals the role of secondary nucleation in recombinant spider silk self-assembly
    Hovanova, Veronika
    Hovan, Andrej
    Zoldak, Gabriel
    Sedlak, Erik
    Humenik, Martin
    PROTEIN SCIENCE, 2023, 32 (08)
  • [2] Critical roles of small silk fibroin molecules in the self-assembly and properties of regenerated silk fibroin
    Li, Hao
    Guo, Yuanyuan
    Yin, Jie
    Chen, Wei
    Xu, Hanfu
    Cheng, Tingcai
    Liu, Chun
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES, 2025, 284
  • [3] Influence of self-assembly regenerated silk fibroin nanofibers on the properties of electrospun materials
    Zhao, Huijing
    Ren, Xia
    Zhang, Yi
    Huang, Lei
    BIO-MEDICAL MATERIALS AND ENGINEERING, 2015, 26 : S89 - S94
  • [4] The role of phosphate in silk fibroin self-assembly: a Hofmeister study
    Wigham, Caleb
    Varude, Vrushali
    O'Donnell, Henry
    Zha, R. Helen
    SOFT MATTER, 2025, : 2461 - 2470
  • [5] Effect of incubation temperature on the self-assembly of regenerated silk fibroin: A study using AFM
    Zhong, Jian
    Liu, Xunwei
    Wei, Daixu
    Yan, Juan
    Wang, Ping
    Sun, Gang
    He, Dannong
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES, 2015, 76 : 195 - 202
  • [6] Surface Modification and Characterisation of Silk Fibroin Fabric Produced by the Layer-by-Layer Self-Assembly of Multilayer Alginate/Regenerated Silk Fibroin
    Shen, Gaotian
    Hu, Xingyou
    Guan, Guoping
    Wang, Lu
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (04):
  • [7] Silk Reconstitution Disrupts Fibroin Self-Assembly
    Koebley, Sean R.
    Thorpe, Daniel
    Pang, Pei
    Chrisochoides, Panos
    Greving, Imke
    Vollrath, Fritz
    Schniepp, Hannes C.
    BIOMACROMOLECULES, 2015, 16 (09) : 2796 - 2804
  • [8] Self-Assembly of Regenerated Silk Fibroin from Random Coil Nanostructures to Antiparallel β-sheet Nanostructures
    Zhong, Jian
    Ma, Mengjia
    Li, Wenying
    Zhou, Juan
    Yan, Zhiqiang
    He, Dannong
    BIOPOLYMERS, 2014, 101 (12) : 1181 - 1192
  • [9] Tyrosine Templating in the Self-Assembly and Crystallization of Silk Fibroin
    Partlow, Benjamin P.
    Bagheri, Mehran
    Harden, James L.
    Kaplan, David L.
    BIOMACROMOLECULES, 2016, 17 (11) : 3570 - 3579
  • [10] Silk I structure formation through silk fibroin self-assembly
    Ming, Jinfa
    Zuo, Baoqi
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE, 2012, 125 (03) : 2148 - 2154