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Portrait of Sara Snogerup Linse

Sara Linse

Professor

Portrait of Sara Snogerup Linse

Scaling behaviour and rate-determining steps in filamentous self-assembly

Author

  • Georg Meisl
  • Luke Rajah
  • Samuel I A Cohen
  • Manuela Pfammatter
  • Andela Šarić
  • Erik Hellstrand
  • Alexander K. Buell
  • Adriano Aguzzi
  • Sara Linse
  • Michele Vendruscolo
  • Christopher M Dobson
  • Tuomas P J Knowles

Summary, in English

The formation of filaments from naturally occurring protein molecules is a process at the core of a range of functional and aberrant biological phenomena, such as the assembly of the cytoskeleton or the appearance of aggregates in Alzheimer's disease. The macroscopic behaviour associated with such processes is remarkably diverse, ranging from simple nucleated growth to highly cooperative processes with a well-defined lagtime. Thus, conventionally, different molecular mechanisms have been used to explain the self-assembly of different proteins. Here we show that this range of behaviour can be quantitatively captured by a single unifying Petri net that describes filamentous growth in terms of aggregate number and aggregate mass concentrations. By considering general features associated with a particular network connectivity, we are able to establish directly the rate-determining steps of the overall aggregation reaction from the system's scaling behaviour. We illustrate the power of this framework on a range of different experimental and simulated aggregating systems. The approach is general and will be applicable to any future extensions of the reaction network of filamentous self-assembly.

Department/s

  • Biophysical Chemistry
  • Biochemistry and Structural Biology
  • MultiPark: Multidisciplinary research focused on Parkinson´s disease
  • NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience

Publishing year

2017

Language

English

Pages

7087-7097

Publication/Series

Chemical Science

Volume

8

Issue

10

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Topic

  • Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2041-6520