This mini-review focuses on the processes and consequences of protein folding and misfolding. The latter process often leads to protein aggregation and precipitation with the aggregates adopting either highly ordered (amyloid fibril) or disordered (amorphous) forms. In particular, the amyloid fibril is discussed because this form has gained considerable notoriety due to its close links to a variety of debilitating diseases including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob diseases, and type-II diabetes. In each of these diseases a different protein forms fibrils, yet the fibrils formed have a very similar structure. The mechanism by which fibrils form, fibril structure, and the cytotoxicity associated with fibril forma...
Fibrillar protein aggregation is a hallmark of a variety of human diseases. Examples include the dep...
Diverse human diseases, including various neurodegenerative disorders and amyloidoses, are thought t...
The majority of protein molecules must fold into defined three-dimensional structures to acquire fun...
This mini-review focuses on the processes and consequences of protein folding and misfolding. The la...
Article first published online: 2 SEP 2008This mini-review focuses on the processes and consequences...
The ability of small heat-shock proteins (sHsps) such as αB-crystallin to inhibit the amorphous (dis...
International audienceProtein aggregation into highly ordered, regularly repeated cross-β sheet stru...
The recent high-resolution structures of amyloid fibrils show that the organization of peptide segme...
Protein aggregation occurs in vivo as a result of improper folding or misfolding. Diverse diseases a...
Protein aggregation occurs in vivo as a result of improper folding or misfolding. Diverse diseases a...
Amyloid refers to the abnormal fibrous, extracellular, proteinaceous deposits found in organs and ti...
The inability of a protein to adopt its native and soluble conformation (protein misfolding) is the ...
Amyloid diseases are characterized by the accumulation of insoluble, -strand-rich aggregates. The un...
Amyloid diseases are characterized by the accumulation of insoluble, -strand-rich aggregates. The un...
The amyloidoses constitute a large group of diseases caused by an alteration in the conformation and...
Fibrillar protein aggregation is a hallmark of a variety of human diseases. Examples include the dep...
Diverse human diseases, including various neurodegenerative disorders and amyloidoses, are thought t...
The majority of protein molecules must fold into defined three-dimensional structures to acquire fun...
This mini-review focuses on the processes and consequences of protein folding and misfolding. The la...
Article first published online: 2 SEP 2008This mini-review focuses on the processes and consequences...
The ability of small heat-shock proteins (sHsps) such as αB-crystallin to inhibit the amorphous (dis...
International audienceProtein aggregation into highly ordered, regularly repeated cross-β sheet stru...
The recent high-resolution structures of amyloid fibrils show that the organization of peptide segme...
Protein aggregation occurs in vivo as a result of improper folding or misfolding. Diverse diseases a...
Protein aggregation occurs in vivo as a result of improper folding or misfolding. Diverse diseases a...
Amyloid refers to the abnormal fibrous, extracellular, proteinaceous deposits found in organs and ti...
The inability of a protein to adopt its native and soluble conformation (protein misfolding) is the ...
Amyloid diseases are characterized by the accumulation of insoluble, -strand-rich aggregates. The un...
Amyloid diseases are characterized by the accumulation of insoluble, -strand-rich aggregates. The un...
The amyloidoses constitute a large group of diseases caused by an alteration in the conformation and...
Fibrillar protein aggregation is a hallmark of a variety of human diseases. Examples include the dep...
Diverse human diseases, including various neurodegenerative disorders and amyloidoses, are thought t...
The majority of protein molecules must fold into defined three-dimensional structures to acquire fun...