When proteins get stuck at the solid phase: Unlocking the secrets to brain diseases
    Originally published by University of Sydney on August 24, 2023     Nanoscale scan image showing protein condensate interaction. Credit: The University of Sydney   Many diseases  affecting the brain and nervous system  are linked to the formation of protein aggregates , or solid condensates , in cells from their liquid form condensate, but little is known  about this process .   This liquid-to-solid transition  can trigger  the formation of what are called amyloid fibrils . These can further form plaques in neurons causing neurodegenerative diseases  such as Alzheimer's .   Biomedical engineers at the University of Sydney , in collaboration with scientists at the University of Cambridge and Harvard University , have now developed sophisticated optical techniques to monitor at close range the process  by which these protein aggregates form.   By testing a protein  associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis—ALS  disease, which affected astrophysicist Professor Stephen Hawking—...