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Featured researches published by Peter Marek.


Nature Chemistry | 2012

Two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy reveals the complex behaviour of an amyloid fibril inhibitor

Chris T. Middleton; Peter Marek; Ping Cao; Chi Cheng Chiu; Sadanand Singh; Ann Marie Woys; Juan J. de Pablo; Daniel P. Raleigh; Martin T. Zanni

While amyloid formation has been implicated in the pathology of over twenty human diseases, the rational design of amyloid inhibitors is hampered by a lack of structural information about amyloid-inhibitor complexes. We use isotope labeling and two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy to obtain a residue-specific structure for the complex of human amylin, the peptide responsible for islet amyloid formation in type 2 diabetes, with a known inhibitor, rat amylin. Based on its sequence, rat amylin should block formation of the C-terminal β-sheet, but at 8 hours after mixing rat amylin blocks the N-terminal β-sheet instead. At 24 hours after mixing, rat amylin blocks neither β-sheet and forms its own β-sheet most likely on the outside of the human fibrils. This is striking because rat amylin is natively disordered and not previously known to form amyloid β-sheets. The results show that even seemingly intuitive inhibitors may function by unforeseen and complex structural processes.


FEBS Letters | 2013

Islet amyloid: From fundamental biophysics to mechanisms of cytotoxicity

Ping Cao; Peter Marek; Harris Noor; Vadim Patsalo; Ling Hsien Tu; Hui Wang; Andisheh Abedini; Daniel P. Raleigh

Pancreatic islet amyloid is a characteristic feature of type 2 diabetes. The major protein component of islet amyloid is the polypeptide hormone known as islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP, or amylin). IAPP is stored with insulin in the β‐cell secretory granules and is released in response to the stimuli that lead to insulin secretion. IAPP is normally soluble and is natively unfolded in its monomeric state, but forms islet amyloid in type 2 diabetes. Islet amyloid is not the cause of type 2 diabetes, but it leads to β‐cell dysfunction and cell death, and contributes to the failure of islet cell transplantation. The mechanism of IAPP amyloid formation is not understood and the mechanisms of cytotoxicity are not fully defined.


Biochemistry | 2008

Rifampicin Does Not Prevent Amyloid Fibril Formation by Human Islet Amyloid Polypeptide but Does Inhibit Fibril Thioflavin-T Interactions: Implications for Mechanistic Studies of β-Cell Death†

Fanling Meng; Peter Marek; Kathryn J. Potter; C. Bruce Verchere; Daniel P. Raleigh

Amyloid formation has been implicated in more than 20 different human diseases, including Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, and type 2 diabetes. The development of inhibitors of amyloid is a topic of considerable interest, both because of their potential therapeutic applications and because they are useful mechanistic probes. Recent studies have highlighted the potential use of rifampicin as an inhibitor of amyloid formation by a variety of polypeptides; however, there are conflicting reports on its ability to inhibit amyloid formation by islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP). IAPP is the cause of islet amyloid in type 2 diabetes. We show that rifampicin does not prevent amyloid formation by IAPP and does not disaggregate preformed IAPP amyloid fibrils;, instead, it interferes with standard fluorescence-based assays of amyloid formation. Rifampicin is unstable in aqueous solution and is readily oxidized. However, the effects of oxidized and reduced rifampicin are similar, in that neither prevents amyloid formation by IAPP. Furthermore, use of a novel p-cyanoPhe analogue of IAPP shows that rifampicin does not significantly affect the kinetics of IAPP amyloid formation. The implications for the development of amyloid inhibitors are discussed as are the implications for studies of the toxicity of islet amyloid. The work also demonstrates the utility of p-cyanoPhe IAPP for the screening of inhibitors. The data indicate that rifampicin cannot be used to test the relative toxicity of IAPP fibrils and prefibril aggregates of IAPP.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Deamidation accelerates amyloid formation and alters amylin fiber structure.

Emily B. Dunkelberger; Lauren E. Buchanan; Peter Marek; Ping Cao; Daniel P. Raleigh; Martin T. Zanni

Deamidation of asparagine and glutamine is the most common nonenzymatic, post-translational modification. Deamidation can influence the structure, stability, folding, and aggregation of proteins and has been proposed to play a role in amyloid formation. However there are no structural studies of the consequences of deamidation on amyloid fibers, in large part because of the difficulty of studying these materials using conventional methods. Here we examine the effects of deamidation on the kinetics of amyloid formation by amylin, the causative agent of type 2 diabetes. We find that deamidation accelerates amyloid formation and the deamidated material is able to seed amyloid formation by unmodified amylin. Using site-specific isotope labeling and two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy, we show that fibers formed by samples that contain deamidated polypeptide contain reduced amounts of β-sheet. Deamidation leads to disruption of the N-terminal β-sheet between Ala-8 and Ala-13, but β-sheet is still retained near Leu-16. The C-terminal sheet is disrupted near Leu-27. Analysis of potential sites of deamidation together with structural models of amylin fibers reveals that deamidation in the N-terminal β-sheet region may be the cause for the disruption of the fiber structure at both the N- and C-terminal β-sheet. Thus, deamidation is a post-translational modification that creates fibers that have an altered structure but can still act as a template for amylin aggregation. Deamidation is very difficult to detect with standard methods used to follow amyloid formation, but isotope-labeled IR spectroscopy provides a means for monitoring sample degradation and investigating the structural consequences of deamidation.


Organic Letters | 2010

Efficient microwave-assisted synthesis of human islet amyloid polypeptide designed to facilitate the specific incorporation of labeled amino acids.

Peter Marek; Ann Marie Woys; Kelvin Sutton; Martin T. Zanni; Daniel P. Raleigh

A cost-efficient, time-reducing solid-phase synthesis of the amyloidogenic, 37 residue islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) is developed using two pseudoprolines (highlighted blue in sequence) in combination with microwave technology. A yield twice that obtained with conventional syntheses is realized. The utility of this protocol is demonstrated by the synthesis of a (13)C(18)O-labeled Ser-20 IAPP variant, a prohibitively expensive and chemically challenging site to label via other protocols. TEM analysis shows the peptide forms normal amyloid (abstract image).


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Residue-Specific, Real-Time Characterization of Lag-Phase Species and Fibril Growth During Amyloid Formation: A Combined Fluorescence and IR Study of p-Cyanophenylalanine Analogs of Islet Amyloid Polypeptide

Peter Marek; Sudipta S. Mukherjee; Martin T. Zanni; Daniel P. Raleigh

Amyloid formation normally exhibits a lag phase followed by a growth phase, which leads to amyloid fibrils. Characterization of the species populated during the lag phase is experimentally challenging, but is critical since the most toxic entities may be pre-fibrillar species. p-Cyanophenylalanine (F(C[triple bond]N)) fluorescence is used to probe the nature of lag-phase species populated during the formation of amyloid by human islet amyloid polypeptide. The polypeptide contains two phenylalanines at positions 15 and 23 and a single tyrosine located at the C-terminus. Each aromatic residue was separately replaced by F(C[triple bond]N). The substitutions do not perturb amyloid formation relative to wild-type islet amyloid polypeptide as detected using thioflavin T fluorescence and electron microscopy. F(C[triple bond]N) fluorescence is high when the cyano group is hydrogen bonded and low when it is not. It can also be quenched via Förster resonance energy transfer to tyrosine. Fluorescence intensity was monitored in real time and revealed that all three positions remained exposed to solvent during the lag phase but less exposed than unstructured model peptides. The time course of amyloid formation as monitored by thioflavin T fluorescence and F(C[triple bond]N) fluorescence is virtually identical. Fluorescence quenching experiments confirmed that each residue remains exposed during the lag phase. These results place significant constraints on the nature of intermediates that are populated during the lag phase and indicate that significant sequestering of the aromatic side chains does not occur until beta-structure sufficient to bind thioflavin T has developed. Seeding studies and analysis of maximum rates confirm that sequestering of the cyano groups occurs concomitantly with the development of thioflavin T binding capability. Overall, the process of amyloid formation and growth appears to be remarkably homogenous in terms of side-chain ordering. F(C[triple bond]N) also provides information about fibril structure. Fluorescence emission measurements, infrared measurements, and quenching studies indicate that the aromatic residues are differentially exposed in the fibril state with Phe15 being the most exposed. F(C[triple bond]N) is readily accommodated into proteins; thus, the approach should be broadly applicable.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Anisotropic Organization and Microscopic Manipulation of Self-Assembling Synthetic Porphyrin Microrods That Mimic Chlorosomes: Bacterial Light-Harvesting Systems

Cyril Chappaz-Gillot; Peter Marek; Bruno Blaive; Gabriel Canard; Jochen Bürck; Győző Garab; Horst Hahn; Tamás Jávorfi; Lóránd Kelemen; Ralph Krupke; Dennis Mössinger; Pál Ormos; Chilla Malla Reddy; Christian Roussel; Gábor Steinbach; Milán Szabó; Anne S. Ulrich; Nicolas Vanthuyne; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Anita Zupcanova; Teodor Silviu Balaban

Being able to control in time and space the positioning, orientation, movement, and sense of rotation of nano- to microscale objects is currently an active research area in nanoscience, having diverse nanotechnological applications. In this paper, we demonstrate unprecedented control and maneuvering of rod-shaped or tubular nanostructures with high aspect ratios which are formed by self-assembling synthetic porphyrins. The self-assembly algorithm, encoded by appended chemical-recognition groups on the periphery of these porphyrins, is the same as the one operating for chlorosomal bacteriochlorophylls (BChls). Chlorosomes, rod-shaped organelles with relatively long-range molecular order, are the most efficient naturally occurring light-harvesting systems. They are used by green photosynthetic bacteria to trap visible and infrared light of minute intensities even at great depths, e.g., 100 m below water surface or in volcanic vents in the absence of solar radiation. In contrast to most other natural light-harvesting systems, the chlorosomal antennae are devoid of a protein scaffold to orient the BChls; thus, they are an attractive goal for mimicry by synthetic chemists, who are able to engineer more robust chromophores to self-assemble. Functional devices with environmentally friendly chromophores-which should be able to act as photosensitizers within hybrid solar cells, leading to high photon-to-current conversion efficiencies even under low illumination conditions-have yet to be fabricated. The orderly manner in which the BChls and their synthetic counterparts self-assemble imparts strong diamagnetic and optical anisotropies and flow/shear characteristics to their nanostructured assemblies, allowing them to be manipulated by electrical, magnetic, or tribomechanical forces.


Biochemistry | 2010

Modulation of p-Cyanophenylalanine Fluorescence by Amino Acid Side Chains and Rational Design of Fluorescence Probes of α-Helix Formation

Humeyra Taskent-Sezgin; Peter Marek; Rosanne Thomas; Daniel E. Goldberg; Juah Chung; Isaac Carrico; Daniel P. Raleigh

p-Cyanophenylalanine is an extremely useful fluorescence probe of protein structure that can be recombinantly and chemically incorporated into proteins. The probe has been used to study protein folding, protein-membrane interactions, protein-peptide interactions, and amyloid formation; however, the factors that control its fluorescence are not fully understood. Hydrogen bonding to the cyano group is known to play a major role in modulating the fluorescence quantum yield, but the role of potential side-chain quenchers has not yet been elucidated. A systematic study of the effects of different side chains on p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence is reported. Tyr is found to have the largest effect followed by deprotonated His, Met, Cys, protonated His, Asn, Arg, and protonated Lys. Deprotonated amino groups are much more effective fluorescence quenchers than protonated amino groups. Free neutral imidazole and hydroxide ion are also effective quenchers of p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence with Stern-Volmer constants of 39.8 and 22.1 M(-1), respectively. The quenching of p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence by specific side chains is exploited in developing specific, high-sensitivity, fluorescence probes of helix formation. The approach is demonstrated with Ala-based peptides that contain a p-cyanophenylalanine-His or a p-cyanophenylalanine-Tyr pair located at positions i and i + 4. The p-cyanophenylalanine-His pair is most useful when the His side chain is deprotonated and is, thus, complementary to the Trp-His pair which is most sensitive when the His side chain is protonated.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2013

Near-field effects and energy transfer in hybrid metal-oxide nanostructures

U. Herr; Balati Kuerbanjiang; Cahit Benel; Giorgos Papageorgiou; Manuel R. Gonçalves; Johannes Boneberg; Paul Leiderer; P. Ziemann; Peter Marek; Horst Hahn

Summary One of the big challenges of the 21st century is the utilization of nanotechnology for energy technology. Nanoscale structures may provide novel functionality, which has been demonstrated most convincingly by successful applications such as dye-sensitized solar cells introduced by M. Grätzel. Applications in energy technology are based on the transfer and conversion of energy. Following the example of photosynthesis, this requires a combination of light harvesting, transfer of energy to a reaction center, and conversion to other forms of energy by charge separation and transfer. This may be achieved by utilizing hybrid nanostructures, which combine metallic and nonmetallic components. Metallic nanostructures can interact strongly with light. Plasmonic excitations of such structures can cause local enhancement of the electrical field, which has been utilized in spectroscopy for many years. On the other hand, the excited states in metallic structures decay over very short lifetimes. Longer lifetimes of excited states occur in nonmetallic nanostructures, which makes them attractive for further energy transfer before recombination or relaxation sets in. Therefore, the combination of metallic nanostructures with nonmetallic materials is of great interest. We report investigations of hybrid nanostructured model systems that consist of a combination of metallic nanoantennas (fabricated by nanosphere lithography, NSL) and oxide nanoparticles. The oxide particles were doped with rare-earth (RE) ions, which show a large shift between absorption and emission wavelengths, allowing us to investigate the energy-transfer processes in detail. The main focus is on TiO2 nanoparticles doped with Eu3+, since the material is interesting for applications such as the generation of hydrogen by photocatalytic splitting of water molecules. We use high-resolution techniques such as confocal fluorescence microscopy for the investigation of energy-transfer processes. The experiments are supported by simulations of the electromagnetic field enhancement in the vicinity of well-defined nanoantennas. The results show that the presence of the nanoparticle layer can modify the field enhancement significantly. In addition, we find that the fluorescent intensities observed in the experiments are affected by agglomeration of the nanoparticles. In order to further elucidate the possible influence of agglomeration and quenching effects in the vicinity of the nanoantennas, we have used a commercial organic pigment containing Eu, which exhibits an extremely narrow particle size distribution and no significant agglomeration. We demonstrate that quenching of the Eu fluorescence can be suppressed by covering the nanoantennas with a 10 nm thick SiOx layer.


Biochemistry | 2007

Aromatic interactions are not required for amyloid fibril formation by islet amyloid polypeptide but do influence the rate of fibril formation and fibril morphology

Peter Marek; Andisheh Abedini; Benben Song; Mandakini Kanungo; Megan E. Johnson; Ruchi Gupta; Warda Zaman; Stanislaus S. Wong; Daniel P. Raleigh

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Martin T. Zanni

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ping Cao

Stony Brook University

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Ann Marie Woys

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Chris T. Middleton

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Horst Hahn

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Hui Wang

Stony Brook University

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