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  • Thioflavine-T and Congo Red reveal the polymorphism of insulin amyloid fibrils when probed by polarization-resolved fluorescence microscopy.

Thioflavine-T and Congo Red reveal the polymorphism of insulin amyloid fibrils when probed by polarization-resolved fluorescence microscopy.

The journal of physical chemistry. B (2013-01-08)
Julien Duboisset, Patrick Ferrand, Wei He, Xiao Wang, Hervé Rigneault, Sophie Brasselet
ABSTRACT

Amyloid fibrils are protein misfolding structures that involve a β-sheet structure and are associated with the pathologies of various neurodegenerative diseases. Here we show that Thioflavine-T and Congo Red, two major dyes used to image fibrils by fluorescence assays, can provide deep structural information when probed by means of polarization-resolved fluorescence microscopy. Unlike fluorescence anisotropy or fluorescence detected linear dichroism imaging, this technique allows to retrieve simultaneously both mean orientation and orientation dispersion of the dye, used here as a reporter of the fibril structure. We have observed that insulin amyloid fibrils exhibit a homogeneous behavior over the fibrils' length, confirming their structural uniformity. In addition, these results reveal the existence of various structures among the observed fibrils' population, in spite of a similar aspect when imaged with conventional fluorescence microscopy. This optical nondestructive technique opens perspectives for in vivo structural analyses or high throughput screening.

MATERIALS
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Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Congo Red, Dye content ≥35 %