Self-Assembly of Protein Fibrils in Microgravity

Author:

Bell Dylan1,Durrance Samuel1,Kirk Daniel2,Gutierrez Hector2,Woodard Daniel3,Avendano Jose2,Sargent Joseph2,Leite Caroline14,Saldana Beatriz14,Melles Tucker14,Jackson Samantha14,Xu Shaohua4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Space Sciences , Florida Institute of Technology , Melbourne , Florida ;

2. College of Engineering , Florida Institute of Technology , Melbourne , Florida ;

3. InnoMedic Health Applications, Inc., Kennedy Space Center , Florida

4. Biological Sciences Department , Florida Institute of Technology , Melbourne , Florida ;

Abstract

Abstract Deposits of insoluble protein fibrils in human tissue are associated with amyloidosis and neurodegenerative diseases. Different proteins are involved in each disease; all are soluble in their native conformation in vivo, but by molecular self-assembly, they all form insoluble protein fibril deposits with a similar cross β-sheet structure. This paper reports the results of an experiment in molecular self-assembly carried out in microgravity on the International Space Station (ISS). The Self-Assembly in Biology and the Origin of Life (SABOL) experiment was designed to study the growth of lysozyme fibrils in microgravity. Lysozyme is a model protein that has been shown to replicate the aggregation processes of other amyloid proteins. Here the design and performance of the experimental hardware is described in detail. The flight experiment was carried to the ISS in the Dragon capsule of the SpaceX CRS-5 mission and returned to Earth after 32 days. The lysozyme fibrils formed in microgravity aboard the ISS show a distinctly different morphology compared to fibrils formed in the ground-control (G-C) experiment. The fibrils formed in microgravity are shorter, straighter, and thicker than those formed in the laboratory G-C experiment. For two incubation periods, (2) about 8.5 days and (3) about 14.5 days, the average ISS and G-C fibril diameters are respectively: Period 2 D ISS = 7.5 nm ± 31 % , and D G C = 3.4 nm ± 31 % Period 3 D ISS = 6.2 nm ± 33 % , and D G C = 3.6 nm ± 33 % . \matrix{{Period\,2} \hfill & {} \hfill & {{D_{ISS}} = 7.5{\rm{nm}} \pm 31\% ,} \hfill \cr {} \hfill & {\rm and} \hfill & {{D_{G - C}} = 3.4{\rm{nm}} \pm 31\%} \hfill \cr {Period\,3} \hfill & {} \hfill & {{D_{ISS}} = 6.2{\rm{nm}} \pm 33\% ,} \hfill \cr {} \hfill & {\rm and} \hfill & {{D_{G - C}} = 3.6{\rm{nm}} \pm 33\% .}}

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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