Nicholas P. Reynolds
Swinburne University of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nicholas P. Reynolds.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Nicholas P. Reynolds; Alice Soragni; Michael Rabe; Dorinel Verdes; Ennio Liverani; Stephan Handschin; Roland Riek; Stefan Seeger
Parkinsons disease is a common progressive neurodegenerative condition, characterized by the deposition of amyloid fibrils as Lewy bodies in the substantia nigra of affected individuals. These insoluble aggregates predominantly consist of the protein α-synuclein. There is increasing evidence suggesting that the aggregation of α-synuclein is influenced by lipid membranes and, vice versa, the membrane integrity is severely affected by the presence of bound aggregates. Here, using the surface-sensitive imaging technique supercritical angle fluorescence microscopy and Förster resonance energy transfer, we report the direct observation of α-synuclein aggregation on supported lipid bilayers. Both the wild-type and the two mutant forms of α-synuclein studied, namely, the familiar variant A53T and the designed highly toxic variant E57K, were found to follow the same mechanism of polymerization and membrane damage. This mechanism involved the extraction of lipids from the bilayer and their clustering around growing α-synuclein aggregates. Despite all three isoforms following the same pathway, the extent of aggregation and their effect on the bilayers was seen to be variant and concentration dependent. Both A53T and E57K formed cross-β-sheet aggregates and damaged the membrane at submicromolar concentrations. The wild-type also formed aggregates in this range; however, the extent of membrane disruption was greatly reduced. The process of membrane damage could resemble part of the yet poorly understood cellular toxicity phenomenon in vivo.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Nicholas P. Reynolds; Tucker Jd; Davison Pa; John A. Timney; Hunter Cn; Graham J. Leggett
A simple method is described for the site-specific attachment of yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) to glass surfaces on length scales ranging from tens of micrometers to ca. 200 nm. 3-Mercaptopropyl(triethoxy silane) is adsorbed onto a glass substrate and subsequently derivatized using a maleimide-functionalized oligomer of ethylene glycol. The resulting protein-resistant surface is patterned by exposure to UV light, causing photochemical degradation of the oligo(ethylene glycol) units to yield aldehyde groups in exposed regions. These are covalently bound to N-(5-amino-1-carboxypentyl)iminoacetic acid, yielding a nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)-functionalized surface, which following complexation with Ni(2+), is coupled to His-tagged YFP. Using scanning near-field photolithography, in which a UV laser coupled to a scanning near-field optical microscope is utilized as the light source for photolithography, it is possible to fabricate lines of protein smaller than 200 nm, in which the biomolecules remain strongly optically active, facilitating the acquisition of diffraction-limited fluorescence images by confocal microscopy.
ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2013
Michael Rabe; Alice Soragni; Nicholas P. Reynolds; Dorinel Verdes; Ennio Liverani; Roland Riek; Stefan Seeger
The aggregation of α-synuclein (α-Syn) is believed to be one of the key steps driving the pathology of Parkinsons disease and related neurodegenerative disorders. One of the present hypotheses is that the onset of such pathologies is related to the rise of α-Syn levels above a critical concentration at which toxic oligomers or mature fibrils are formed. In the present study, we find that α-Syn aggregation in vitro is a spontaneous process arising at bulk concentrations as low as 1 nM and below in the presence of both hydrophilic glass surfaces and cell membrane mimicking supported lipid bilayers (SLBs). Using three-dimensional supercritical angle fluorescence (3D-SAF) microscopy, we observed the process of α-Syn aggregation in situ. As soon as α-Syn monomers were exposed to the surface, they started to adsorb and aggregate along the surface plane without a prior lag phase. However, at a later stage of the aggregation process, a second type of aggregate was observed. In contrast to the first type, these aggregates showed an extended structure being tethered with one end to the surface and being mobile at the other end, which protruded into the solution. While both types of α-Syn aggregates were found to contain amyloid structures, their growing mechanisms turned out to be significantly different. Given the clear evidence that surface-induced α-Syn aggregation in vitro can be triggered at bulk concentrations far below physiological concentrations, the concept of a critical concentration initiating aggregation in vivo needs to be reconsidered.
Biomacromolecules | 2014
Nicholas P. Reynolds; Mirren Charnley; Raffaele Mezzenga; Patrick G. Hartley
Fibrous networks assembled from synthetic peptides are promising candidates for biomimetic cell culture platforms and implantable biomaterials. The ability of the materials to reproduce physiological cell-matrix interactions is essential. However, the synthetic complexity of such systems limits their applications, thus alternative materials are desirable. Here, we design lysozyme derived amyloid fibril networks with controllable topographies, and perform a comprehensive study of the response of cultured fibroblast and epithelial cells. At high surface coverage a favorable increase in spreading and the generation of focal adhesions was observed, due to a combination of biomimetic chemistry and morphology. Their ease of synthesis, makes the nanoscale fibrils presented here ideal materials for future clinical applications whereby large volumes of biomimetic biomaterials are required. Furthermore, the surface chemistry of the fibrils is sufficient for the promotion of focal adhesions with cultured cells, eliminating the need for complex protocols for fibril decoration with bioactive moieties.
Biomacromolecules | 2013
Nicholas P. Reynolds; Katie E. Styan; Christopher D. Easton; Yali Li; Lynne J. Waddington; Cecile Lara; John S. Forsythe; Raffaele Mezzenga; Patrick G. Hartley; Benjamin W. Muir
We show for the first time the possibility of using networks of amyloid fibrils, adsorbed to solid supports and with plasma polymer coatings, for the fabrication of chemically homogeneous surfaces with well-defined nanoscale surface features reminiscent of the topography of the extracellular matrix. The robust nature of the fibrils allows them to withstand the plasma polymer deposition conditions used with no obvious deleterious effect, thus enabling the underlying fibril topography to be replicated at the polymer surface. This effect was seen despite the polymer coating thickness being an order of magnitude greater than the fibril network. The in vitro culture of fibroblast cells on these surfaces resulted in increased attachment and spreading compared to flat plasma polymer films with the same chemical composition. The demonstrated technique allows for the rapid and reproducible fabrication of substrates with nanoscale fibrous topography that we believe will have applications in the development of new biomaterials allowing, for example, the investigation of the effect of extracellular matrix mimicking nanoscale morphology on cellular phenotype.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Cecile Lara; Nicholas P. Reynolds; Joshua T. Berryman; Anqiu Xu; Afang Zhang; Raffaele Mezzenga
Amyloid fibrils are implicated in over 20 neurodegenerative diseases. The mechanisms of fibril structuring and formation are not only of medical and biological importance but are also relevant for material science and nanotechnologies due to the unique structural and physical properties of amyloids. We previously found that hen egg white lysozyme, homologous to the disease-related human lysozyme, can form left-handed giant ribbons, closing into nanotubes. By using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry analysis, we here identify a key component of such structures: the ILQINS hexapeptide. By combining atomic force microscopy and circular dichorism, we find that this fragment, synthesized by solid-phase peptide synthesis, also forms fibrillar structures in water at pH 2. However, all fibrillar structures formed possess an unexpected right-handed twist, a rare chirality within the corpus of amyloid experimental observations. We confirm by small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering and molecular dynamics simulations that these fibrils are composed of conventional left-handed β-sheets, but that packing stresses between adjacent sheets create this twist of unusual handedness. We also show that the right-handed fibrils represent a metastable state toward β-sheet-based microcrystals formation.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Jozef Adamcik; Antoni Sánchez-Ferrer; Nadine Ait-Bouziad; Nicholas P. Reynolds; Hilal A. Lashuel; Raffaele Mezzenga
Tau protein and its fragments self-assemble into amyloid fibrils in the presence of polyanions, such as heparin. By combining microscopy, scattering, and spectroscopy techniques, we studied the aggregation of the 26-mer Tau-derived peptide alone, Tau(306-327), the third repeat fragment (R3) of the microtubule-binding domain. We show that: i) the sole Tau(306-327) can self-assemble into amyloid fibrils without the need of aggregation-promoting polyanions; ii) the resulting structures consist of surprisingly large, well-ordered 2D laminated flat ribbons, with a log-normal distribution of the lateral width, reaching the unprecedented lateral size of 350 nm and/or 45 individual protofilaments, that is, the largest amyloid laminated structures ever observed for Tau or any other amyloidogenic sequence. Our results provide insight into the molecular determinants of Tau aggregation and open new perspectives in the understanding of the assembly of amyloid fibrils and β-sheet-based biomaterials.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2011
Gerhard Magis; John D. Olsen; Nicholas P. Reynolds; Graham J. Leggett; C. Neil Hunter; Thijs J. Aartsma; Raoul N. Frese
A prerequisite for any “lab on a chip” device that utilizes an electrical signal from the sensor protein is the ability to attach the protein in a specific orientation onto a conducting substrate. Here, we demonstrate the covalent attachment to a gold surface of light‐harvesting membrane proteins, from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, via cysteine (Cys) residues engineered on either the cytoplasmic or periplasmic face. This simple directed attachment is superior in its ability to retain light‐harvesting complex (LHC) function, when compared to a similar attachment procedure utilizing a self‐assembled monolayer on gold. LH 1 has previously been observed to have superior photostability over LH 2 (Magis et al. [2010] Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1798, 637–645); this characteristic is maintained even with the introduction of Cys residues.
Biomacromolecules | 2015
Nicholas P. Reynolds; Mirren Charnley; Marie N. Bongiovanni; Patrick G. Hartley; Sally L. Gras
Networks of nanoscale fibrous coatings made from self-assembled peptides are promising candidates for biomaterials that can promote the growth of mammalian cells. One particularly attractive feature is the possibility of adding biofunctional sequences to peptides to promote cell attachment. We deconvolute the topographic and chemical effects of nanoscale fibrils on cells by depositing a plasma polymer film on TTR1-based fibrils decorated with a range of cell adhesive chemistries (RGD and cycloRGDfK), producing a surface that retains the nanoscale fibrous topography of surface-bound fibrils but lacks the fibril surface chemistry. The surface topography was found to influence cell toxicity and spreading, and the fibril surface chemistry influenced cell attachment and spreading. This study highlights the importance of considering both the chemical and physical features of novel biomaterials and illustrates the use of plasma polymer deposition as a tool for examining the relationship between amyloid fibril structure and function.
Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2017
Nhiem Tran; Nicole Bye; Bradford A. Moffat; David K. Wright; Andrew Cuddihy; Tracey M. Hinton; Adrian Hawley; Nicholas P. Reynolds; Lynne J. Waddington; Xavier Mulet; Ann M. Turnley; M. Cristina Morganti-Kossmann; Benjamin W. Muir
Engineered nanoparticles with multiple complementary imaging modalities are of great benefit to the rapid treatment and diagnosis of disease in various organs. Herein, we report the formulation of cubosomes and hexosomes that carry multiple amphiphilic imaging contrast agents in their self-assembled lipid bilayers. This is the first report of the use of both near infrared fluorescent (NIRF) imaging and gadolinium lipid based magnetic resonance (MR) imaging modalities in cubosomes and hexosomes. High-throughput screening was used to rapidly optimize formulations with desirable nano-architectures and low in vitro cytotoxicity. The dual-modal imaging nanoparticles in vivo biodistribution and organ specific contrast enhancement were then studied. The NIRF in vivo imaging results indicated accumulation of both cubosomes and hexosomes in the liver and spleen of mice up to 20h post-injection. Remarkably, the biodistribution of the nanoparticle formulations was affected by the mesophase (i.e. cubic or hexagonal), a finding of significant importance for the future use of these compounds, with hexosomes showing higher accumulation in the spleen than the liver compared to cubosomes. Furthermore, in vivo MRI data of animals injected with either type of lyotropic liquid crystal nanoparticle displayed enhanced contrast in the liver and spleen.
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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