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  • Atomic structures of IAPP (amylin) fusions suggest a mechanism for fibrillation and the role of insulin in the process.

Atomic structures of IAPP (amylin) fusions suggest a mechanism for fibrillation and the role of insulin in the process.

Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society (2009-05-29)
Jed J W Wiltzius, Stuart A Sievers, Michael R Sawaya, David Eisenberg
ABSTRACT

Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP or amylin) is a peptide hormone produced and stored in the beta-islet cells of the pancreas along with insulin. IAPP readily forms amyloid fibrils in vitro, and the deposition of fibrillar IAPP has been correlated with the pathology of type II diabetes. The mechanism of the conversion that IAPP undergoes from soluble to fibrillar forms has been unclear. By chaperoning IAPP through fusion to maltose binding protein, we find that IAPP can adopt a alpha-helical structure at residues 8-18 and 22-27 and that molecules of IAPP dimerize. Mutational analysis suggests that this dimerization is on the pathway to fibrillation. The structure suggests how IAPP may heterodimerize with insulin, which we confirmed by protein crosslinking. Taken together, these experiments suggest the helical dimerization of IAPP accelerates fibril formation and that insulin impedes fibrillation by blocking the IAPP dimerization interface.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Insulin human, meets USP testing specifications
Sigma-Aldrich
Insulin human, ≥95% (HPLC), semisynthetic, powder, non-sterile
Sigma-Aldrich
Insulin human, recombinant, expressed in yeast (proprietary host)
Sigma-Aldrich
Insulin human, recombinant, expressed in yeast, γ-irradiated, suitable for cell culture