Materials (May 2021)

Scaling Concepts in Serpin Polymer Physics

  • Samuele Raccosta,
  • Fabio Librizzi,
  • Alistair M. Jagger,
  • Rosina Noto,
  • Vincenzo Martorana,
  • David A. Lomas,
  • James A. Irving,
  • Mauro Manno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14102577
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. 2577

Abstract

Read online

α1-Antitrypsin is a protease inhibitor belonging to the serpin family. Serpin polymerisation is at the core of a class of genetic conformational diseases called serpinopathies. These polymers are known to be unbranched, flexible, and heterogeneous in size with a beads-on-a-string appearance viewed by negative stain electron microscopy. Here, we use atomic force microscopy and time-lapse dynamic light scattering to measure polymer size and shape for wild-type (M) and Glu342→Lys (Z) α1-antitrypsin, the most common variant that leads to severe pathological deficiency. Our data for small polymers deposited onto mica and in solution reveal a power law relation between the polymer size, namely the end-to-end distance or the hydrodynamic radius, and the polymer mass, proportional to the contour length. We use the scaling concepts of polymer physics to assess that α1-antitrypsin polymers are random linear chains with a low persistence length.

Keywords