Skin gets its elasticity from elastin, which aggregates into fibrous assemblies. But at high local concentrations, almost any protein can aggregate into an amyloid, according to some proposals. So Pomès wondered, “If nature designs a protein that is supposed to aggregate, how does it avoid an amyloid state?” The key, he finds, is disorder-inducing amino acids.
Computer-simulated folding of peptides with elastin-like motifs in water revealed that constructing an elastomere requires a high degree of disorder and hydration. Such disorder only occurred when...
The Rockefeller University Press
2006
The Rockefeller University Press
2006
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