Sugar-Terminated
Nanoparticle Chaperones Are 102–105 Times
Better Than Molecular Sugars in Inhibiting Protein Aggregation and
Reducing Amyloidogenic Cytotoxicity
posted on 2017-04-06, 19:56authored byNibedita Pradhan, Shashi Shekhar, Nihar R. Jana, Nikhil R. Jana
Sugar-based osmolyte
molecules are known to stabilize proteins under stress, but usually
they have poor chaperone performance in inhibiting protein aggregation.
Here, we show that the nanoparticle form of sugars molecule can enhance
their chaperone performance typically by 102–105 times, compared to molecular sugar. Sugar-based plate-like
nanoparticles of 20−40 nm hydrodynamic size have been synthesized
by simple heating of acidic aqueous solution of glucose/sucrose/maltose/trehalose.
These nanoparticles have excitation-dependent green/yellow/orange
emission and surface chemistry identical to the respective sugar molecule.
Fibrillation of lysozyme/insulin/amyloid beta in extracellular space,
aggregation of mutant huntingtin protein inside model neuronal cell,
and cytotoxic effect of fibrils are investigated in the presence of
these sugar nanoparticles. We found that sugar nanoparticles are 102–105 times efficient than respective sugar
molecules in inhibiting protein fibrillation and preventing cytotoxicity
arising of fibrils. We propose that better performance of the nanoparticle
form is linked to its stronger binding with fibril structure and enhanced
cell uptake. This result suggests that nanoparticle form of osmolyte
can be an attractive option in prevention and curing of protein aggregation-derived
diseases.