A novel method for monitoring fibrillogenesis is
developed and applied to the amyloidogenic peptide, islet
amyloid polypeptide (IAPP). The approach, based on electrospray
ionization mass spectrometry, is complementary to existing
assays of fibril formation as it monitors directly the
population of precursor rather than product molecules.
We are able to monitor fiber formation in two modes: a
quenched mode in which fibril formation is halted by dilution
into denaturant and a real time mode in which fibril formation
is conducted within the capillary of the electrospray source.
Central to the method is the observation that fibrillar
IAPP does not compromise the ionization of monomeric IAPP.
Furthermore, under mild ionization conditions, fibrillar
IAPP does not dissociate and contribute to the monomeric
signal. Critically, we introduce an internal standard,
rat IAPP, for analysis on the mass spectrometer. This standard
is sufficiently similar in sequence in that it ionizes
identically to human IAPP. Furthermore, the sequence is
sufficiently different in that it does not form fibrils
and is distinguishable on the basis of mass. Applied to
IAPP fibrillogenesis, our technique reveals that precursor
consumption in seeded reactions obeys first-order kinetics.
Furthermore, a consistent level of monomer persists in
both seeded and unseeded experiments after the fibril formation
is complete. Given the inherent stability of fibrils, we
expect this approach to be applicable to other amyloid
systems.