Professor; Associate Chair for Graduate Studies
chapmanm@umich.eduOffice Information:
5268 BSB
phone: 734.764.7592
Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology; Office of the Chair
Recent Publications
Bacteria have potent, selective inhibitor of amyloid formation
Matthew Chapman
Curli are extracellular functional amyloids that are assembled by enteric bacteria during biofilm formation and host colonization. An efficient secretion system and chaperone network ensures that the major curli fiber subunit, CsgA, does not form intracellular amyloid aggregates. We discovered that the periplasmic protein CsgC was a highly effective inhibitor of CsgA amyloid formation. In the absence of CsgC, CsgA formed toxic intracellular aggregates. In vitro, CsgC inhibited CsgA amyloid formation at substoichiometric concentrations and maintained CsgA in a non-β-sheet-rich conformation. Interestingly...
See More