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Title: Aggregation of lysozyme and of poly(ethylene glycol)-modified lysozyme after adsorption to silica. Author: Daly SM, Przybycien TM, Tilton RD. Journal: Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces; 2007 May 15; 57(1):81-8. PubMed ID: 17317116. Abstract: Surface-induced aggregation is a common instability during protein storage, delivery and purification. This aggregation can lead to the formation of fibrils rich in intermolecular beta-sheet structure. Techniques to probe surface-clustering are limited. Here we use protein intrinsic fluorescence and thioflavin T probe fluorescence in a total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) sampling geometry to simultaneously monitor the kinetics of adsorption and aggregation for chicken egg lysozyme on a silica surface. We observe a slow surface-induced aggregation process that continues well after the lysozyme adsorption kinetics have plateaued. The rate of surface-induced aggregation is independent of the lysozyme concentration in solution. Consistent with the clustering observed via thioflavin T fluorescence, infrared amide I band spectra also show a 1.5-fold increase in intermolecular beta-sheet content upon lysozyme adsorption. Tryptophan emission spectra show no evidence for any tertiary structural change upon adsorption. Furthermore, we observe that the covalent modification of lysozyme with a single poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) grafted chain does not inhibit aggregation on the surface, but a second PEG graft significantly inhibits the intermolecular beta-sheet formation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]