- The effects of organic solvents on the membrane-induced fibrillation of human islet amyloid polypeptide and on the inhibition of the fibrillation.
The effects of organic solvents on the membrane-induced fibrillation of human islet amyloid polypeptide and on the inhibition of the fibrillation.
The organic solvent dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) and 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-isopropanol (HFIP) have been widely used as a pre-treating agent of amyloid peptides and as a vehicle for water-insoluble inhibitors. These solvents are left in many cases as a trace quantity in bulk and membrane environments with treated amyloid peptides or inhibitors. In the present work, we studied the effects of the two organic solvents on the aggregation behaviors of human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) and the performances of an all-D-amino-acid inhibitor D-NFGAIL in preventing hIAPP fibrillation both in bulk solution and at phospholipid membrane. We showed that the presence of 1% v/v DMSO or HFIP decreases the rate of fibril formation of hIAPP at the lipid membrane rather than accelerates the fibril formation as what happened in bulk solution. We also showed that the presence of 1% v/v DMSO or HFIP impairs the activity of the inhibitor at the lipid membrane surface dramatically, while it affects the efficiency of the inhibitor in bulk solution slightly. We found that the inhibitor inserts into the lipid membrane more deeply or with more proportion in the presence of the organic solvents than it does in the absence of the organic solvents, which may hinder the binding of the inhibitor to hIAPP at the lipid membrane. Our results suggest that the organic solvents should be used with caution in studying membrane-induced fibrillogenesis of amyloid peptides and in testing amyloid inhibitors under membrane environments to avoid incorrect evaluation to the fibrillation process of amyloid peptides and the activity of inhibitors.