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1.
The amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) with 39-42 residues is the major component of amyloid plaques found in brains of Alzheimer's disease patients, and soluble oligomeric peptide aggregates mediate toxic effects on neurons. The Abeta aggregation involves a conformational change of the peptide structure to beta-sheet. In the present study, we report on the effect of detergents on the structure transitions of Abeta, to mimic the effects that biomembranes may have. In vitro, monomeric Abeta(1-40) in a dilute aqueous solution is weakly structured. By gradually adding small amounts of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) or lithium dodecyl sulfate to a dilute aqueous solution, Abeta(1-40) is converted to beta-sheet, as observed by CD at 3 degrees C and 20 degrees C. The transition is mainly a two-state process, as revealed by approximately isodichroic points in the titrations. Abeta(1-40) loses almost all NMR signals at dodecyl sulfate concentrations giving rise to the optimal beta-sheet content (approximate detergent/peptide ratio = 20). Under these conditions, thioflavin T fluorescence measurements indicate a maximum of aggregated amyloid-like structures. The loss of NMR signals suggests that these are also involved in intermediate chemical exchange. Transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy NMR spectra indicate that the C-terminal residues are more dynamic than the others. By further addition of SDS or lithium dodecyl sulfate reaching concentrations close to the critical micellar concentration, CD, NMR and FTIR spectra show that the peptide rearranges to form a micelle-bound structure with alpha-helical segments, similar to the secondary structures formed when a high concentration of detergent is added directly to the peptide solution.  相似文献   

2.
The amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) constitutes the major peptide component of the amyloid plaque deposits of Alzheimer's disease in humans. The Abeta changes from a nonpathogenic to a pathogenic conformation resulting in self-aggregation and deposition of the peptide. It has been established that denaturing factors (such as the interaction with membranes) are involved in the structural transition. This work is aimed at determining the effect of hydrophobic Teflon on the conformation of the Abeta (1-40). Prior to adsorption, the secondary structure and self-aggregation state of the Abeta in solution were established as a function of pH. Three different species coexist: unordered monomers/dimers, small oligomers in mainly a regular beta-sheet structure, and bigger aggregates having a twisted beta-sheet conformation. Transferring the Abeta from the solution to the Teflon surface strongly promotes alpha-helix formation. Furthermore, increasing the degree of coverage of the Teflon by the Alphabeta protein leads to a conformational change toward a more enriched beta-sheet structure.  相似文献   

3.
Recent experiments with amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide indicate that formation of toxic oligomers may be an important contribution to the onset of Alzheimer's disease. The toxicity of Abeta oligomers depends on their structure, which is governed by assembly dynamics. Due to limitations of current experimental techniques, a detailed knowledge of oligomer structure at the atomic level is missing. We introduce a molecular dynamics approach to study Abeta dimer formation. 1), We use discrete molecular dynamics simulations of a coarse-grained model to identify a variety of dimer conformations; and 2), we employ all-atom molecular mechanics simulations to estimate thermodynamic stability of all dimer conformations. Our simulations of a coarse-grained Abeta peptide model predicts 10 different planar beta-strand dimer conformations. We then estimate the free energies of all dimer conformations in all-atom molecular mechanics simulations with explicit water. We compare the free energies of Abeta(1-42) and Abeta(1-40) dimers. We find that 1), dimer conformations have higher free energies compared to their corresponding monomeric states; and 2), the free-energy difference between the Abeta(1-42) and the corresponding Abeta(1-40) dimer conformation is not significant. Our results suggest that Abeta oligomerization is not accompanied by the formation of thermodynamically stable planar beta-strand dimers.  相似文献   

4.
Senile plaques composed of the peptide Abeta contribute to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), and mechanisms underlying their formation and growth may be exploitable as therapeutic targets. To examine the process of amyloid plaque growth in human brain, we have utilized size exclusion chromatography (SEC), translational diffusion measured by NMR, and in vitro models of Abeta amyloid growth to identify the oligomerization state of Abeta that is competent to add onto an existing amyloid deposit. SEC of radiolabeled and unlabeled Abeta over a concentration range of 10(-)(10)-10(-)(4) M demonstrated that the freshly dissolved peptide eluted as a single low molecular weight species, consistent with monomer or dimer. This low molecular weight Abeta species isolated by SEC was competent to deposit onto preexisting amyloid in preparations of AD cortex, with first-order kinetic dependence on soluble Abeta concentration, establishing that solution-phase oligomerization is not rate limiting. Translational diffusion measurements of the low molecular weight Abeta fraction demonstrate that the form of the peptide active in plaque deposition is a monomer. In deliberately aged (>6 weeks) Abeta solutions, a high molecular weight (>100 000 M(r)) species was detectable in the SEC column void. In contrast to the active monomer, assembled Abeta isolated from the column showed little or no focal association with AD tissue. These studies establish that, at least in vitro, Abeta exists as a monomer at physiological concentrations and that deposition of monomers, rather than of oligomeric Abeta assemblies, mediates the growth of existing amyloid in human brain preparations.  相似文献   

5.
Lim KH  Kim YK  Chang YT 《Biochemistry》2007,46(47):13523-13532
Transition-metal ions (Cu2+ and Zn2+) play critical roles in the Abeta plaque formation. However, precise roles of the metal ions in the Abeta amyloidogenesis have been controversial. In this study, the molecular mechanism of the metal-induced Abeta oligomerization was investigated with extensive metal ion titration NMR experiments. Upon additions of the metal ions, the N-terminal region (1-16) of the Abeta (1-40) peptide was selectively perturbed. In particular, polar residues 4-8 and 13-15 were more strongly affected by the metal ions, suggesting that those regions may be the major binding sites of the metal ions. The NMR signal changes of the N-terminal region were dependent on the peptide concentrations (higher peptide concentrations resulted in stronger signal changes), suggesting that the metal ions facilitate the intermolecular contact between the Abeta peptides. The Abeta (1-40) peptides (>30 microM) were eventually oligomerized even at low temperature (3 degrees C), where the Abeta peptides are stable as monomeric forms without the metal ions. The real-time oligomerization process was monitored by 1H/15N HSQC NMR experiments, which provided the first residue-specific structural transition information. Hydrophobic residues 12-21 initially underwent conformational changes due to the intermolecular interactions. After the initial structural rearrangements, the C-terminal residues (32-40) readjusted their conformations presumably for effective oligomerization. Similar structural changes of the metal-free Abeta (1-40) peptides were also observed in the presence of the preformed oligomers, suggesting that the conformational transitions may be the general molecular mechanism of the Abeta (1-40) amyloidogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
We report here structural differences between Abeta(1-40) protofibrils and mature amyloid fibrils associated with Alzheimer's disease as determined using hydrogen-deuterium exchange-mass spectrometry (HX-MS) coupled with on-line proteolysis. Specifically, we have identified regions of the Abeta(1-40) peptide containing backbone amide hydrogen atoms that are protected from HX or exposed when this peptide is incorporated into protofibrils or amyloid fibrils formed in phosphate-buffered saline without stirring at 37 degrees C. Study of protofibrils was facilitated by use of the protofibril-stabilizing agent calmidazolium chloride. Our data clearly show that both the C-terminal segment 35-40 and the N-terminal segment 1-19 are highly exposed to HX in both fibrils and protofibrils. In contrast, the internal fragment 20-34 is highly protected from exchange in fibrils but much less so in protofibrils. The data suggest that the beta-sheet elements comprising the amyloid fibril are already present in protofibrils, but that they are expanded into some adjacent residues upon the formation of mature amyloid. The N-terminal approximately ten residues appear to be unstructured in both protofibrils and fibrils. The 20-30 segment of Abeta(1-40) is more ordered in fibrils than in protofibrils, suggesting that, if protofibrils are a mechanistic precursor of fibrils, the transition from protofibril to fibril involves substantial ordering of this region of the Abeta peptide.  相似文献   

7.
Yan MC  Sha Y  Wang J  Xiong XQ  Ren JH  Cheng MS 《Proteins》2008,70(3):731-738
HIV-1 protease (HIV-PR) consists of two identical subunits that are united together through a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet formed of the peptide termini of each monomer. Since the active site exists only in the dimer, a strategy that is attracting more and more attention in inhibitor design and which may overcome the serious drug resistance caused by competitive inhibitors is to block the peptide termini of the monomer, thereby interfering with formation of the active dimer. In the present work, we performed several extensive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the HIV-PR monomer in water to illustrate its solvated conformation and dynamics behavior. We found that the peptide termini usually assembled into beta-sheet after several nanoseconds' simulation, and became much less flexible. This beta-sheet is stabilized by intramolecular interactions and is not easily disaggregated under the present MD simulation conditions. This transformation may be an important transition during the relaxing and equilibrating of the HIV-PR monomer in aqueous solution, and the terminal beta-sheet may be one of the major conformations of the solvated HIV-PR monomer termini in water. This work may provide new insights into the dynamics behavior and dimerization mechanism of HIV-PR, and more significantly, offer a more rational receptor model for the design and discovery of novel dimerization inhibitors than crystalline structures.  相似文献   

8.
Amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides are one of the classes of amphiphilic molecules that on dissolution in aqueous solvents undergo interesting conformational transitions. These conformational changes are known to be associated with their neuronal toxicity. The mechanism of structural transition involved in the monomeric Abeta to toxic assemblage is yet to be understood at the molecular level. Early results indicate that oriented molecular crowding has a profound effect on their assemblage formation. In this work, we have studied how different microenvironments affect the conformational transitions of one of the active amyloid beta-peptide fragments (Abeta(25-35)). Spectroscopic techniques such as CD and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy were used. It was observed that a stored peptide concentrates on dissolution in methanol adopts a minor alpha-helical conformation along with unordered structures. On changing the methanol concentration in the solvated film form, the conformation switches to the antiparallel beta-sheet structure on the hydrophilic surface, whereas the peptide shows transition from a mixture of helix and unordered structure into predominantly a beta-sheet with minor contribution of helix structure on the hydrophobic surface. Our present investigations indicate that the conformations induced by the different surfaces dictate the gross conformational preference of the peptide concentrate.  相似文献   

9.
Matsuzaki K  Horikiri C 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):4137-4142
Interactions between amyloid beta-peptides (Abeta) and neuronal membranes have been postulated to play an important role in the neuropathology of Alzheimer's disease. To gain insight into the molecular details of this association, we investigated the interactions of Abeta (1-40) with ganglioside-containing membranes by circular dichroism (CD) and Fourier transform infrared-polarized attenuated total reflection (FTIR-PATR) spectroscopy. The CD study revealed that at physiological ionic strength Abeta (1-40) specifically binds to ganglioside-containing membranes inducing a two-state, unordered --> beta-sheet transition above a threshold intramembrane ganglioside concentration, which depends on the host lipid bilayers used. Furthermore, differences in the number and position of sialic acid residues of the carbohydrate backbone significantly affected the conformational transition of the peptide. FTIR-PATR spectroscopy experiments demonstrated that Abeta (1-40) forms an antiparallel beta-sheet, the plane of which lies parallel to the membrane surface, inducing dehydration of lipid interfacial groups and perturbation of acyl chain orientation. These results suggest that Abeta (1-40) imposes negative curvature strain on ganglioside-containing lipid bilayers, disturbing the structure and function of the membranes.  相似文献   

10.
We report here a recombinant expression system that allows production of large quantities of Alzheimer's Abeta(1-40) peptide. The material is competent to dissolve in water solutions with "random-coil properties," although its conformation and factual oligomerization state are determined by the physico-chemical solution conditions. When dissolved in 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) at 37 degrees C, the peptide is able to undergo a nucleated polymerization reaction. The aggregation profile is characteristically bipartite, consisting of lag and growth phase. From these curves we determined the lag time as well as the rate of aggregation. Both values were found to depend on peptide concentration and addition or formation of seeds. Moreover, they can vary considerably between apparently identical samples. These data imply that the nucleation event is under influence of a stochastic factor that can manifest itself in profound macroscopic differences in the aggregation kinetics of otherwise indistinguishable samples.  相似文献   

11.
To test, at the level of individual amino acids, the conformation of an exchangeable apolipoprotein in aqueous solution and in the presence of an osmolyte trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), six synthetic peptide analogues of human apolipoprotein C-1 (apoC-1, 57 residues) containing point mutations in the predicted alpha-helical regions were analyzed by circular dichroism (CD). The CD spectra and the melting curves of the monomeric wild-type and plasma apoC-1 in neutral low-salt solutions superimpose, indicating 31 +/- 4% alpha-helical structure at 22 degrees C that melts reversibly with T(m,WT) = 50 +/- 2 degrees C and van't Hoff enthalpy deltaH(v,WT)(Tm) = 18 +/- 2 kcal/mol. G15A substitution leads to an increased alpha-helical content of 42 +/- 4% and an increased T(m,G15A) = 57 +/- 2 degrees C, which corresponds to stabilization by delta deltaG(app) = +0.4 +/- 1.5 kcal/mol. G15P mutant has approximately 20% alpha-helical content at 22 degrees C and unfolds with low cooperativity upon heating to 90 degrees C. R23P and T45P mutants are fully unfolded at 0-90 degrees C. In contrast, Q31P mutation leads to no destabilization or unfolding. Consequently, the R23 and T45 locations are essential for the stability of the cooperative alpha-helical unit in apoC-1 monomer, G15 is peripheral to it, and Q31 is located in a nonhelical linker region. Our results suggest that Pro mutagenesis coupled with CD provides a tool for assigning the secondary structure to protein groups, which should be useful for other self-associating proteins that are not amenable to NMR structural analysis in aqueous solution. TMAO induces a reversible cooperative coil-to-helix transition in apoC-1, with the maximal alpha-helical content reaching 74%. Comparison with the maximal alpha-helical content of 73% observed in lipid-bound apoC-1 suggests that the TMAO-stabilized secondary structure resembles the functional lipid-bound apolipoprotein conformation.  相似文献   

12.
Proteoglycans and their constituent glycosaminoglycans are associated with all amyloid deposits and may be involved in the amyloidogenic pathway. In Alzheimer's disease, plaques are composed of the amyloid-beta peptide and are associated with at least four different proteoglycans. Using CD spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy and electron microscopy, we examined glycosaminoglycan interaction with the amyloid-beta peptides 1-40 (Abeta40) and 1-42 (Abeta42) to determine the effects on peptide conformation and fibril formation. Monomeric amyloid-beta peptides in trifluoroethanol, when diluted in aqueous buffer, undergo a slow random to amyloidogenic beta sheet transition. In the presence of heparin, heparan sulfate, keratan sulfate or chondroitin sulfates, this transition was accelerated with Abeta42 rapidly adopting a beta-sheet conformation. This was accompanied by the appearance of well-defined amyloid fibrils indicating an enhanced nucleation of Abeta42. Incubation of preformed Abeta42 fibrils with glycosaminoglycans resulted in extensive lateral aggregation and precipitation of the fibrils. The glycosaminoglycans differed in their relative activities with the chondroitin sulfates producing the most pronounced effects. The less amyloidogenic Abeta40 isoform did not show an immediate structural transition that was dependent upon the shielding effect by the phosphate counter ion. Removal or substitution of phosphate resulted in similar glycosaminoglycan-induced conformational and aggregation changes. These findings clearly demonstrate that glycosaminoglycans act at the earliest stage of fibril formation, namely amyloid-beta nucleation, and are not simply involved in the lateral aggregation of preformed fibrils or nonspecific adhesion to plaques. The identification of a structure-activity relationship between amyloid-beta and the different glycosaminoglycans, as well as the condition dependence for glycosaminoglycan binding, are important for the successful development and evaluation of glycosaminoglycan-specific therapeutic interventions.  相似文献   

13.
Abeta peptide is the major component of senile plaques (SP), which accumulate in the brain of a patient with Alzheimer's disease (AD). A recent report indicated that isoflurane enhanced Abeta oligomerization (micro-aggregation) and subsequent cytotoxicity of the Abeta peptide. A separate study showed that a clinically relevant concentration of isoflurane induces apoptosis and increases Abeta production in a human neuroglioma cell line. In vitro studies have indicated that halothane interacts specifically with Abeta peptide to induce oligomerization and that Abeta42 oligomerizes faster than Abeta40. The specific interactions of isoflurane, propofol, and thiopental with uniformly 15N labeled Abeta40 and Abeta42 peptide were investigated using multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments. We found that isoflurane and propofol (at higher concentration) interact with Abeta40 peptides and induce Abeta oligomerization. Thiopental does not interact with specific residues (G29, A30, and I31) of Abeta40; hence, the peptide remains in the monomeric form. On the basis of our NMR study, thiopental does not oligomerize Abeta40 even at higher concentrations.  相似文献   

14.
In a recent model of beta-amyloid (Abeta) fibrils, based mainly on solid-state NMR data, a molecular layer consists of two beta-sheets (residues 12-23 and 31-40 of Abeta1-40), folded onto one another by a connecting "bend" structure (residues 25-29) in the side-chain dimension. In this paper, we use two N-methyl amino acids to disrupt each of the two beta-sheets individually (2NMe(NTerm), residues 17 and 19; and 2NMe(CTerm), residues 37 and 39), or both of them at the same time (4NMe, with the above four N-methylated residues). Our data indicate that incorporation of two N-methyl amino acids into one beta-sheet is sufficient to disrupt that sheet while leaving the other, unmodified beta-sheet intact and able to form fibrils. We show, however, that disruption of each of the two beta-sheets has strikingly different effects on fibrillogenesis kinetics and fibril morphology. Both 2NMe(NTerm) and 2NMe(CTerm) form fibrils at similar rates, but more slowly than that of unmodified Abeta1-40. Electron microscopy shows that 2NMe(NTerm) forms straight fibrils with fuzzy amorphous material coating the edges, while 2NMe(CTerm) forms very regular, highly twisted fibrils-in both cases, distinct from the morphology of Abeta1-40 fibrils. Both 2NMe peptides show a "CMC" approximately four times greater than that of Abeta1-40. CD spectra of these peptides also evolve differently in time: whereas the CD spectra of 2NMe(NTerm) evolve little over 10 days, those of 2NMe(CTerm) show a transition to high beta-sheet content at about day 4-5. We also show that disruption of both beta-sheet domains, as in 4NMe, prevents fibril formation altogether, and renders Abeta1-40 highly water soluble and monomeric, and with solvent-exposed side chains. In summary, our data show (1) that the two beta-sheet domains fold in a semiautonomous manner, since disrupting each one still allows the other to fold; (2) that disruption of the N-terminal beta-sheet has a more profound effect on fibrillogenesis than disruption of the C-terminal beta-sheet, suggesting that the former is the more critical for the overall structure of the fibril; and (3) that disruption of both beta-sheet domains renders the peptide monomeric and unable to form fibrils.  相似文献   

15.
The conformation of porcine serum ferric transferrin (Tf) and its stability against denaturation were studied by circular dichroism. Tf was estimated to have 19-24% alpha-helix and 50-55% beta-sheet based on the methods of Chang et al. (Chang, C.T., Wu, C.-S.C., & Yang, J.T., 1978, Anal. Biochem. 91, 13-31) and Provencher and Glöckner (Provencher, S.W. & Glöckner, J., 1981, Biochemistry 20, 33-37). Removal of the bound ferric ions (apo-Tf) did not alter the overall conformation, but there were subtle changes in local conformation based on its near-UV CD spectrum. The Tfs were stable between pH 3.5 and 11. Denaturation by guanidine hydrochloride (Gu-HCl) showed two transitions at 1.6 and 3.4 M denaturant. The process of denaturation by acid and base was reversible, whereas that by Gu-HCl was partially reversible. The irreversible thermal unfolding of Tfs began at temperatures above 60 degrees C and was not complete even at 80 degrees C. The bound irons (based on absorbance at 460 nm) were completely released at pH < 4 or in Gu-HCl solution above 1.7 M, when the protein began to unfold, but they remained intact in neutral solution even at 85 degrees C. The NH2- and COOH-terminal halves of the Tf molecule obtained by limited trypsin digestion had CD spectra similar to the spectrum of native Tf, and the COOH-terminal fragment had more stable secondary structure than the NH2-terminal fragment.  相似文献   

16.
Murayama K  Tomida M 《Biochemistry》2004,43(36):11526-11532
Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectra were measured for an aqueous solution (pD = 5.40) of defatted monomer bovine serum albumin (BSA) over a temperature range of 25-90 degrees C to investigate temperature-induced secondary structure and conformation changes. The curve fitting method combined with the Fourier self-deconvolution technique allowed us to explore details of the secondary structure and conformation changes in defatted BSA. Particularly striking in the FT-IR spectra was an observation of the formation of an irreversible intermolecular beta-sheet of BSA on heating above 70 degrees C. A band at 1630 cm(-1) in the spectra was assigned to short-segment chains connecting alpha-helical segments. The transition temperature for the short-segment chains connecting alpha-helical segments is lower by 17-18 degrees C, when compared to those of the alpha-helix, turn, and intermolecular beta-sheet structures of BSA, suggesting that the alpha-helix and turn structures of BSA are cooperatively denatured on heating. Moreover, the results give an important feature in heat-induced denaturation of BSA that the conformation changes occur twice around both 57 and 75 degrees C. The appearance of two peaks is interpreted by the collapse of the N-terminal BSA domain due to the crevice in the vicinity between domains I and II at low-temperature transition and by the change in cooperative unit composed of the other two BSA domains at high-temperature transition.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Four small type I collagen CNBr peptides containing complete natural sequences were purified from bovine skin and investigated by CD and 1H- and 13C-nmr spectroscopies to obtain information concerning their conformation and thermal stability. CD showed that a triple helix was formed at 10 degrees C in acidic aqueous solution by peptide alpha l(I) CB2 only, and to lesser extent, by alpha 1(I) CB4, whereas peptides alpha 1(I) CB5 and alpha 2(I) CB2 remained unstructured. Analytical gel filtration confirmed that peptides alpha 1(I) CB2 and alpha 1(I) CB4 only were able to form trimeric species at temperature between 14 and 20 degrees C, and indicated that the monomer = trimer equilibrium was influenced by the chaotropic nature of the salt present in the eluent, by its concentration, and by temperature variations. CD measurements at increasing temperatures showed that alpha 1(I) CB2 was less stable than its synthetic counterpart due to incomplete prolyl hydroxylation of the preparation from the natural source. 1H- and 13C-nmr spectra acquired in the temperature range 0-47 and 0-27 degrees C, respectively, indicated that with decreasing temperature the most abundant from of alpha 1(I) CB2 was in slow exchange with an assembled form, characterized by broad lines, as expected for the triple-helical conformation. A large number of trimer cross peaks was observed both in the proton and carbon spectra, and these were most likely due to the nonequivalence of the environments of the three chains in the triple helix. This nonequivalence may have implications for the aggregation of collagen molecules and for collagen binding to other molecules. The thermal transition from trimer to monomer was also monitored by 1H-nmr following the change in area of the signal belonging to one of the two beta protons of the C-terminal homoserine. The unfolding process was found to be fully reversible with a melting temperature of 13.4 degrees C, in agreement with CD results. The qualitative superposition of the melting curves obtained by CD for the peptide bond characteristics and by nmr for a side chain suggests that triple-helical backbone and side chains constitute a single unit.  相似文献   

19.
Protein-protein interactions are frequently mediated by stable, intermolecular beta-sheets. A number of cytokines and the HIV Protease, for example, dimerize through beta-sheet motifs. Evidence also suggests that the macromolecular assemblies of peptides and proteins in amyloid fibrils are stabilized by intermolecular beta-sheets. In this paper, we report that interfering with the backbone hydrogen bonding of an amyloidgenic peptide (Abeta16-20) by replacing amide bonds with ester bonds prevents the aggregation of the peptide. The ester bonds were incorporated in an alternating fashion so that the peptide presents two unique hydrogen bonding faces when arrayed in an extended, beta-strand conformation; one face of the peptide has normal hydrogen bonding capabilities, but the other face is missing amide protons and its ability to hydrogen bond is severely limited. Analytical ultracentrifugation experiments demonstrate that this ester peptide, Abeta16-20e, is predominantly monomeric under solution conditions, unlike the fibril-forming Abeta16-20 peptide. Abeta16-20e also inhibits the aggregation of the Abeta1-40 peptide and disassembles preformed Abeta1-40 fibrils. These results suggest that backbone hydrogen bonding is critical for the assembly of amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

20.
Recent studies have shown that at physiological conditions (pH 7.6, 37 degrees C), the reactivity of recombinant apoE isoforms secreted by mammalian cells toward amyloid peptide beta (Abeta40) follows the order apoE2 > apoE3 > apoE4 for the apoE monomer and apoE2 > apoE3 for apoE dimer that is formed via that intramolecular disulfide bridges. Different Abeta binding properties have been reported for the plasma-derived apoE and commercially available apoE preparations that differ from the native apoE forms in the degree of their O-glycosylation. To define structural elements of apoE involved in the interaction with Abeta, we have introduced point mutations as well as amino- and carboxy-terminal deletions in the apoE structure. The mutant apoE forms were expressed transiently using the Semliki Forest Virus system, and the culture medium was utilized to study the reactivity of the mutated proteins with Abeta 40. This analysis showed that a mutation in the O-glycosylation site of apoE2 (Thr194-Ala) did not affect the SDS-stable binding of apoE to Abeta. In contrast, introduction of cysteine at position 158 of apoE4 (Arg112, Cys158) increased the SDS-stable binding of apoE to Abeta to the levels similar to those observed in apoE2. Similar analysis showed that apoE truncated at residues 259, 249, 239, and 229 retains the SDS-stable binding to Abeta40, whereas apoE truncated at residues 185 and 165 does not bind to Abeta. The deletion of aminoterminal residues 2-19 reduced the SDS-stable binding of apoE2 to Abeta and deletion of residues 2-81 abolished binding to Abeta. It is also noteworthy that the (Delta2-81) apoE mutant exists predominantly as a dimer, suggesting that removal of residues 2-81 promoted dimerization of apoE. These findings suggest that the amino- and carboxy-terminal residues of apoE are required for SDS-stable binding of apoE to Abeta and that the presence of at least one cysteine contributes to the efficient Abeta binding.  相似文献   

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