The Mango project has pushed the boundary of protein aggregation research beyond the state of the art, both technologically and conceptually.
In the technological arena, we have established peptide arrays as a fast screening method of potential interacting peptides.
We developed the Pept-insTM technology, a method of inducing co-aggregation using synthetic amyloid peptides and employed it both for the specific detection of proteins in a complex biological matrix, and for functional knock-down of target proteins. We have demonstrated that Pept-Ins are effective against cancer targets, pathogenic bacteria or viruses. Moreover, their intravenous or intraperitoneal administration can reduce tumour growth or infection, respectively.
We developed a computational pipeline for predicting heterologous amyloidogenic interactions that takes the structure of the aggregation-prone regions in account (
https://cordax.switchlab.org/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)) and another one that reduces the aggregation-propensity of proteins without affecting their stability (
https://solubis.switchlab.org/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)).
Also, we introduced the use of Atomic Force Microscopy coupled with Fourier-Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (AFM-FTIR) for the in situ study of amyloids. We have obtained funding for such an instrument, with an important additional capability, namely the detection of fluorescence emission on the same samples. This will allow identifying amyloid deposits in tissue sections and imaging that area of interest at the nanoscale using AFM-FTIR.
We have made major conceptual breakthroughs, as well. We have shown that synthetic aggregating peptides, homologous to the aggregation-prone regions present in proteins can induce the aggregation and functional inactivation specific proteins. We have shown that such induced amyloid aggregation event is selectively toxic to cells that rely on the function of the aggregating protein.
We also demonstrated that protein aggregation in plants can generate valuable new traits (e.g. increased growth or starch production). Again, we did not observe any toxic side effects from the presence of these aggregates, suggesting the loss of the function of the (co-)aggregating proteins is a strong determinant of the effect of aggregates on their biological environment.
We have shown that by targeting redundant aggregation-prone regions present in several proteins, it is possible to induce a co-aggregation cascade that leads to massive aggregation and eventually to the collapse of the proteome. We have established inducing co-aggregation with synthetic peptides as a potential new therapeutic modality to address bacterial and viral infections.
We coined the concept of critical aggregation prone regions. These are a minority of aggregation prone regions of proteins that reside in structurally unstable regions of the proteins and are most likely to induce aggregation. We showed that carefully designed mutations in these aggregation prone regions can greatly reduce the aggregation propensity of these proteins. This is of special importance for the therapeutic use of proteins (e.g. monoclonal antibodies), where aggregation is a factor that limits production and efficacy in patients.
We have unequivocally proven the importance of co-aggregation cascades in human pathology, e.g. in neurodegenerative disease.