Packing polymorphism of steric zippers, determined by X-ray microcrystallography. A steric zipper is a pair of interdigitated β-sheets, generally with a dry interface between them. The views here look down the fibril axes, showing three layers of the zipper. In actual fibrils and microcrystals, there are tens of thousands of layers. Each strand forms backbone hydrogen bonds to strands above and below it. Water molecules are shown as aqua spheres a. Registration polymorphism of SSTNVG from islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP). The left steric zipper (PDB code 3DG122) can be transformed to the right steric zipper by moving the top sheet to the left, and flipping side chains S2 and N4. b. Registration polymorphism of VQIVYK from tau protein. The left zipper (PDB code 2ON921) can be transformed to the right zipper by moving the top sheet to the right. c. Facial polymorphism of NNQQ from yeast prion Sup35. The left NNQQ steric (PDB codes 2ONX21) zipper displays ‘face-to-back’ packing with N1 and Q3 amino acid side chains (yellow) of the top sheet interdigitated with Q4 and N2 (white) of the bottom sheet. In contrast, the right NNQQ steric zipper (PDB codes 2OLX 21) displays ‘face-to-face’ packing, with N1 and Q3 side chains (yellow) of both sheets forming the interdigitated interface. d. Facial polymorphism of NNQNTF from elk prion protein25. Both NNQNTF setric zippers are found in the same crystal structure, one face-to-face (right), with N1, Q3 and T5 (yellow) of both sheets forming the interdigitated interface; the other back-to-back, with sidechains N2, N4, and F6 interdigitated (white).