There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
The amyloidogenic protein beta-microglobulin was characterized by affinity capillary
electrophoresis (CE). CE could separate conformational variants of beta2-microglobulin
and with the amyloid-specific dye Congo red as a buffer additive it was possible to
measure different Congo red-affinities of native and abnormally folded beta2-microglobulin.
We find that native beta2-microglobulin has an intermediate affinity for Congo red
at pH 7.3 and that binding involves electrostatic interactions. The conformational
variant of beta2-microglobulin that appears in acetonitrile solutions binds Congo
red more strongly. Affinity CE using Congo red as a buffer additive is a new, simple,
fast, and quantitative micromethod for the characterization of soluble conformational
intermediates of amyloidogenic proteins.