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Download fileDisrupting Crystal Growth through Molecular Recognition: Designer Therapies for Kidney Stone Prevention
journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-28, 13:03 authored by Alexander
G. Shtukenberg, Longqin Hu, Amrik Sahota, Bart Kahr, Michael D. WardConspectusAberrant
crystallization within the human body can lead to several
disease states or adverse outcomes, yet much remains to be understood
about the critical stages leading to these events, which can include
crystal nucleation and growth, crystal aggregation, and the adhesion
of crystals to cells. Kidney stones, which are aggregates of single
crystals with physiological origins, are particularly illustrative
of pathological crystallization, with 10% of the U.S. population experiencing
at least one stone occurrence in their lifetimes. The human record
of kidney stones is more than 2000 years old, as noted by Hippocrates
in his renowned oath and much later by Robert Hooke in his treatise Micrographia. William Hyde Wollaston, who was a physician,
chemist, physicist, and crystallographer, was fascinated with stones,
leading him to discover an unusual stone that he described in 1810
as cystic oxide, later corrected to cystine. Despite this long history,
however, a fundamental understanding of the stages of stone formation
and the rational design of therapies for stone prevention have remained
elusive.This Account reviews discoveries and advances from
our laboratories
that have unraveled the complex crystal growth mechanisms of l-cystine, which forms l-cystine kidney stones in at least
20 000 individuals in the U.S. alone. Although l-cystine
stones affect fewer individuals than common calcium oxalate stones,
they are usually larger, recur more frequently, and are more likely
to cause chronic kidney disease. Real-time in situ atomic force microscopy (AFM) reveals that the crystal growth of
hexagonal l-cystine is characterized by a complex mechanism
in which six interlaced anisotropic spirals grow synchronously, emanating
from a single screw dislocation to generate a micromorphology with
the appearance of stacked hexagonal islands. In contrast, proximal
heterochiral dislocations produce features that appear to be spirals
but actually are closed loops, akin to a Frank–Read source.
These unusual and aesthetic growth patterns can be explained by the
coincidence of the dislocation Burgers vector and the crystallographic
61 screw axis. Inhibiting l-cystine crystal growth
is key to preventing stone formation. Decades of studies of “tailor-made
additives”, which are imposter molecules that closely resemble
the solute and bind to crystal faces through molecular recognition,
have demonstrated their effects on crystal properties such as morphology
and polymorphism. The ability to visualize crystal growth in real
time by AFM enables quantitative measurements of step velocities and,
by extension, the effect of prospective inhibitors on growth rates,
which can then be used to deduce inhibition mechanisms. Investigations
with a wide range of prospective inhibitors revealed the importance
of precise molecular recognition for binding l-cystine imposters
to crystal sites, which results in step pinning and the inhibition
of step advancement as well as the growth of bulk crystals. Moreover,
select inhibitors of crystal growth, measured in vitro, reduce or eliminate stone formation in knockout mouse models of
cystinuria, promising a new pathway to l-cystine stone prevention.
These observations have wide-ranging implications for the design of
therapies based on tailor-made additives for diseases associated with
aberrant crystallization, from disease-related stones to “xenostones”
that form in vivo because of the crystallization
of low-solubility therapeutic agents such as antiretroviral agents.
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william hyde wollastonknockout mouse modelsdislocation burgers vectoratomic force microscopyaccount reviews discoveries2000 years old“ xenostones ”yet much remainsstacked hexagonal islandssolubility therapeutic agentsinclude crystal nucleationaesthetic growth patternspreventing stone formationeliminate stone formationsingle screw dislocationseveral disease statesprecise molecular recognitionmade additives ”,deduce inhibition mechanismsvisualize crystal growthdisrupting crystal growthprospective inhibitors revealedcystine stone preventioncystine crystal growth1 subcritical stages leadingcystine kidney stonesstone formationstone preventionmolecular recognitionmade additivescrystal growthprospective inhibitorsscrew axismuch laterkidney stonesantiretroviral agentscrystal sitescrystal propertiescrystal facescrystal aggregationgrowth ratescystine impostersselect inhibitorshexagonal lvivo vitro situ micrographia single crystals“ tailorusually largerunusual stonestep velocitiesstep pinningstep advancementrobert hookerenowned oathremained elusiverelated stonesranging implicationspopulation experiencingphysiological originsparticularly illustrativenew pathwaylong historylater correctedimposter moleculeshuman recordhuman bodyfundamental understandingdiseases associatedcystic oxidecrystallographic 6complex mechanismclosely resembleclosed loopsadverse outcomes>, reduce