University of Michigan

Michigan Engineering

Skip to content. Skip to navigation

Materials Science and Engineering, University of Michigan

  MSE / Research / Publications / Reduced transglutaminase-catalyzed protein aggregation is observed in the presence of creatine using sedimentation velocity
Document Actions

Reduced transglutaminase-catalyzed protein aggregation is observed in the presence of creatine using sedimentation velocity

by bjlove last modified 02-25-2008 12:42

Burguera, EF and Love BJ

neurodegenerative diseases; transglutaminase; enzyme inhibition; protein aggregation; creatine; sedimentation; laser light scattering

Transglutaminases (TGases) are enzymes that catalyze covalent isopeptide crosslinks between reactive lysine and glutamine residues in proteins. Higher than normal local concentrations of TGase have been correlated with increased protein aggregation in vivo. These insoluble protein aggregates are the hallmark of several neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's diseases, although each aggregating protein involved is disease specific. Because TGase is implicated in protein aggregation, there is evidence that its regulation may retard disease progression. Here we report on a laser light transmission technique as an in vitro tool to gauge the efficacy of creatine.. a candidate inhibitor, to regulate aggregation. Sedimentation velocities of protein-coated particles in TGase-containing water glycerol solutions were tracked with different levels of creatine. Sedimentation velocities were converted to apparent aggregate sizes using Stoke's law of sedimentation. The results indicated that creatine promoted up to a 20% reduction in protein aggregation in vitro. This technique may prove to be useful in identifying other functional TGase inhibitors. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Analytical Biochemistry

2006

350

1

113-119

article


Brian Love

Personal tools