首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia and is widely believed to be due to the accumulation of beta-amyloid peptides (Abeta) and their interaction with the cell membrane. Abetas are hydrophobic peptides derived from the amyloid precursor proteins by proteolytic cleavage. After cleavage, these peptides are involved in a self-assembly-triggered conformational change. They are transformed into structures that bind to the cell membrane, causing cellular degeneration. However, it is not clear how these peptide assemblages disrupt the structural and functional integrity of the membrane. Membrane fluidity is one of the important parameters involved in pathophysiology of disease-affected cells. Probing the Abeta aggregate-lipid interactions will help us understand these processes with structural detail. Here we show that a fluid lipid monolayer develop immobile domains upon interaction with Abeta aggregates. Atomic force microscopy and transmission electron microscopy data indicate that peptide fibrils are fragmented into smaller nano-assemblages when interacting with the membrane lipids. Our findings could initiate reappraisal of the interactions between lipid assemblages and Abeta aggregates involved in Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

3.
Shivaprasad S  Wetzel R 《Biochemistry》2004,43(49):15310-15317
Most models for the central cross-beta folding unit in amyloid fibrils of the Alzheimer's plaque protein Abeta align the peptides in register in H-bonded, parallel beta-sheet structure. Some models require the Abeta peptide to undergo a chain reversal when folding into the amyloid core, while other models feature very long extended chains, or zigzag chains, traversing the protofilament. In this paper we introduce the use of disulfide bond cross-linking to probe the fold within the core and the packing interactions between beta-sheets. In one approach, amyloid fibrils grown under reducing conditions from each of three double cysteine mutants (17/34, 17/35, and 17/36) of the Abeta(1-40) sequence were subjected to oxidizing conditions. Of these three mutants, only the Leu17Cys/Leu34Cys peptide could be cross-linked efficiently while resident in fibrils. In another approach, double Cys mutants were cross-linked as monomers before aggregation, and the resulting fibrils were assessed for stability, antibody binding, dye binding, and cross-seeding efficiency. Here too, fibrils from the 17/34 double Cys mutant most closely resemble wild-type Abeta(1-40) fibrils. These data support models of the Abeta fibril in which the Leu17 and Leu34 side chains of the same peptide pack against each other at the beta-sheet interface within the amyloid core. Related cross-linking strategies may reveal longer range spatial relationships. The ability of the cross-linked 17/35 double Cys mutant Abeta to also make amyloid fibrils illustrates a remarkable plasticity of the amyloid structure and suggests a structural mechanism for the generation of conformational variants of amyloid.  相似文献   

4.
Brain amyloid composed of the approximately 40-amino-acid human beta-amyloid peptide A beta is integral to Alzheimer's disease pathology. To probe the importance of a conformational transition in Abeta during amyloid growth, we synthesized and examined the solution conformation and amyloid deposition activity of A beta congeners designed to have similar solution structures but to vary substantially in their barriers to conformational transition. Although all these peptides adopt similar solution conformations, a covalently restricted Abeta congener designed to have a very high barrier to conformational rearrangement was inactive, while a peptide designed to have a reduced barrier to conformational transition displayed an enhanced deposition rate relative to wild-type A beta. The hyperactive peptide, which is linked to a heritable A beta amyloidosis characterized by massive amyloid deposition at an early age, displayed a reduced activation barrier to deposition consistent with a larger difference in activation entropy than in activation enthalpy relative to wild-type A beta. These results suggest that in Alzheimer's disease, as in the prion diseases, a conformational transition in the depositing peptide is essential for the conversion of soluble monomer to insoluble amyloid, and alterations in the activation barrier to this transition affect amyloidogenicity and directly contribute to human disease.  相似文献   

5.
A critical event in Alzheimer's disease is the transition of Abeta peptides from their soluble forms into disease-associated beta-sheet-rich conformers. Structural analysis of a complete D-amino acid replacement set of Abeta(1-42) enabled us to localize in the full-length 42-mer peptide the region responsible for the conformational switch into a beta-sheet structure. Although NMR spectroscopy of trifluoroethanol-stabilized monomeric Abeta(1-42) delineated two separated helical domains, only the destabilization of helix I, comprising residues 11-24, caused a transition to a beta-sheet structure. This conformational alpha-to-beta switch was directly accompanied by an aggregation process leading to the formation of amyloid fibrils.  相似文献   

6.
Chi EY  Ege C  Winans A  Majewski J  Wu G  Kjaer K  Lee KY 《Proteins》2008,72(1):1-24
The lipid membrane has been shown to mediate the fibrillogenesis and toxicity of Alzheimer's disease (AD) amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide. Electrostatic interactions between Abeta40 and the phospholipid headgroup have been found to control the association and insertion of monomeric Abeta into lipid monolayers, where Abeta exhibited enhanced interactions with charged lipids compared with zwitterionic lipids. To elucidate the molecular-scale structural details of Abeta-membrane association, we have used complementary X-ray and neutron scattering techniques (grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction, X-ray reflectivity, and neutron reflectivity) in this study to investigate in situ the association of Abeta with lipid monolayers composed of either the anionic lipid 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (DPPG), the zwitterionic lipid 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), or the cationic lipid 1,2-dipalmitoyl 3-trimethylammonium propane (DPTAP) at the air-buffer interface. We found that the anionic lipid DPPG uniquely induced crystalline ordering of Abeta at the membrane surface that closely mimicked the beta-sheet structure in fibrils, revealing an intriguing templated ordering effect of DPPG on Abeta. Furthermore, incubating Abeta with lipid vesicles containing the anionic lipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (POPG) induced the formation of amyloid fibrils, confirming that the templated ordering of Abeta at the membrane surface seeded fibril formation. This study provides a detailed molecular-scale characterization of the early structural fluctuation and assembly events that may trigger the misfolding and aggregation of Abeta in vivo. Our results implicate that the adsorption of Abeta to anionic lipids, which could become exposed to the outer membrane leaflet by cell injury, may serve as an in vivo mechanism of templated-aggregation and drive the pathogenesis of AD.  相似文献   

7.
Major constituents of the amyloid plaques found in the brain of Alzheimer's patients are the 39-43 residue beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptides. Extensive in vitro as well as in vivo biochemical studies have shown that the 40- and 42-residue Abeta peptides play major roles in the neurodegenerative pathology of Alzheimer's disease. Although the two Abeta peptides share common aggregation properties, the 42-residue peptide is more amyloidogenic and more strongly associated with amyloid pathology. Thus, characterizations of the two Abeta peptides are of critical importance in understanding the molecular mechanism of Abeta amyloid formation. In this report, we present combined CD and NMR studies of the monomeric states of the two peptides under both non-amyloidogenic (<5 degrees C) and amyloid-forming conditions (>5 degrees C) at physiological pH. Our CD studies of the Abeta peptides showed that initially unfolded Abeta peptides at low temperature (<5 degrees C) gradually underwent conformational changes to more beta-sheet-like monomeric intermediate states at stronger amyloidogenic conditions (higher temperatures). Detailed residue-specific information on the structural transition was obtained by using NMR spectroscopy. Residues in the N-terminal (3-12) and 20-22 regions underwent conformational changes to more extended structures at the stronger amyloidogenic conditions. Almost identical structural transitions of those residues were observed in the two Abeta peptides, suggesting a similar amyloidogenic intermediate for the two peptides. The 42-residue Abeta (1-42) peptide was, however, more significantly structured at the C-terminal region (39-42), which may lead to the different aggregation propensity of the two peptides.  相似文献   

8.
Metal ions have been suggested to induce aggregation of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta), which is a key event in Alzheimer's disease. However, direct evidence that specific metal-peptide interactions are responsible for the amyloid formation has not previously been provided. Here we present the first example of the metal-induced amyloid formation by an Abeta fragment, which exhibits a clear-cut dependence on the amino acid sequence. A heptapeptide, EFRHDSG, corresponding to the amino acid residues 3-9 of Abeta (Abeta(3-9)) undergoes a conformational transition from irregular to beta-sheet and self-associates into insoluble aggregates upon Cu(II) binding. A Raman spectrum analysis of the Cu(II)-Abeta(3-9) complex and aggregation assays of mutated Abeta(3-9) peptides demonstrated that a concerted Cu(II) coordination of the imidazole side chain of His6, the carboxyl groups of Glu3 and Asp7, and the amino group at the N-terminus is essential for the amyloid formation. Although Abeta(1-9) and Abeta(2-9) also contain the metal binding sites, neither of these peptides forms amyloid depositions in the presence of Cu(II). The results of this study may not only provide new insight into the mechanism of amyloid formation, but also be important as a step toward the construction of proteinaceous materials with a specific function under the control of Cu(II).  相似文献   

9.
Alzheimer's disease is characterized by amyloid deposits in the parenchyma and vasculature of the brain. The plaques are mainly composed of amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides ending in residues 40 and 42. Novel longer Abeta peptides were found in brain homogenates of mouse models of Alzheimer's disease and human brain tissue of patients carrying the familial amyloid precursor protein V717F mutation. The biophysical characteristics of these longer Abeta peptides and their role in plaque formation are not understood. We chose to focus our studies on Abeta peptides ending in residues Ile45, Val46 and Ile47 as these peptides were identified in human brain tissue. A combination of circular dichroism and electron microscopy was used to characterize the secondary and tertiary structures of these peptides. All three longer Abeta peptides consisted mainly of a beta-sheet secondary structure. Electron microscopy demonstrated that these beta-structured peptides formed predominantly amorphous aggregates, which convert to amyloid fibres over extended time periods. As these longer peptides may act as seeds for the nucleation of fibrils composed predominantly of shorter amyloid peptides, these interactions were studied. All peptides accelerated the random to beta-structural transitions and fibril formation of Abeta40 and 42.  相似文献   

10.
Amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) assembly into toxic oligomeric and fibrillar structures is a seminal event in Alzheimer's disease, therefore blocking this process could have significant therapeutic benefit. A rigorous mechanistic understanding of Abeta assembly would facilitate the targeting and design of fibrillogenesis inhibitors. Prior studies have shown that Abeta fibrillogenesis involves conformational changes leading to the formation of extended beta-sheets and that an alpha-helix-containing intermediate may be involved. However, the significance of this intermediate has been a matter of debate. We report here that the formation of an oligomeric, alpha-helix-containing assembly is a key step in Abeta fibrillogenesis. The generality of this phenomenon was supported by conformational studies of 18 different Abeta peptides, including wild-type Abeta(1-40) and Abeta(1-42), biologically relevant truncated and chemically modified Abeta peptides, and Abeta peptides causing familial forms of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Without exception, fibrillogenesis of these peptides involved an oligomeric alpha-helix-containing intermediate and the kinetics of formation of the intermediate and of fibrils was temporally correlated. The kinetics varied depending on amino acid sequence and the extent of peptide N- and C-terminal truncation. The pH dependence of helix formation suggested that Asp and His exerted significant control over this process and over fibrillogenesis in general. Consistent with this idea, Abeta peptides containing Asp-->Asn or His-->Gln substitutions showed altered fibrillogenesis kinetics. These data emphasize the importance of the dynamic interplay between Abeta monomer conformation and oligomerization state in controlling fibrillogenesis kinetics.  相似文献   

11.
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) due to amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) is a key pathological feature of patients with Alzheimer's disease and hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis, Dutch-type (HCHWA-D). The CAA in these disorders is characterized by deposition of Abeta in the smooth muscle cells within the cerebral vessel wall. Recently, a new mutation in Abeta, E22K, was identified in several Italian families that, like HCHWA-D, is associated with CAA and hemorrhagic stroke. These two similar disorders, stemming from amino acid substitutions at position 22 of Abeta, implicate the importance of this site in the pathology of HCHWA. Previously we showed that HCHWA-D Abeta(1-40) containing the E22Q substitution induces robust pathologic responses in cultured human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells (HCSM cells), including highly elevated levels of cell-associated Abeta precursor (AbetaPP) and cell death. In the present study, a series of E22 mutant Abeta(1-40) peptides were synthesized, and their pathogenic properties toward cultured HCSM cells were evaluated. Quantitative fluorescence analyses showed that mutant Abeta(1-40) peptides either containing a loss of charge (E22Q and E22A) or a change of charge (E22K) bind to the surface of HCSM cells and form amyloid fibrils. Similarly, this same group of E22 mutant Abeta(1-40) peptides caused enhanced pathologic responses in HCSM cells. In contrast, wild-type E22 or the charge-preserving E22D Abeta(1-40) peptides were devoid of any of these pathogenic properties. These data suggest that a change or loss of charge at position 22 of Abeta enhances the pathogenic effects of the peptide toward HCSM cells and may contribute to the pathogenesis of the phenotypically related HCHWA disorders.  相似文献   

12.
Beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta), which is cleaved from the larger trans-membrane amyloid precursor protein, is found deposited in the brain of patients suffering from Alzheimer's disease and is linked with neurotoxicity. We report the results of studies of Abeta1-42 and the effect of metal ions (Cu2+ and Zn2+) on model membranes using 31P and 2H solid-state NMR, fluorescence and Langmuir Blodgett monolayer methods. Both the peptide and metal ions interact with the phospholipid headgroups and the effects on the lipid bilayer and the peptide structure were different for membrane incorporated or associated peptides. Copper ions alone destabilise the lipid bilayer and induced formation of smaller vesicles but when Abeta1-42 was associated with the bilayer membrane copper did not have this effect. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicated that Abeta1-42 adopted more beta-sheet structure when incorporated in a lipid bilayer in comparison to the associated peptide, which was largely unstructured. Incorporated peptides appear to disrupt the membrane more severely than associated peptides, which may have implications for the role of Abeta in disease states.  相似文献   

13.
Deposition of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) into amyloid plaques is one of the invariant neuropathological features of Alzheimer's disease. Proteins that codeposit with Abeta are potentially important for the pathogenesis, and a recently discovered plaque-associated protein is the collagenous Alzheimer amyloid plaque component (CLAC). In this study, we investigated the molecular interactions between Abeta aggregates and CLAC using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and a solid-phase binding immunoassay. We found that CLAC binds to Abeta with high affinity, that the central region of Abeta is necessary and sufficient for CLAC interaction, and that the aggregation state of Abeta as well as the presence of negatively charged residues is important. We also show that this binding results in a reduced rate of fibril elongation. Taken together, we suggest that CLAC becomes involved at an intermediate stage in the pathogenesis by binding to Abeta fibrils, including fibrils formed from peptides with truncated N- or C-termini, and thereby slows their growth.  相似文献   

14.
Hemolysin E (HlyE) is a 34 kDa protein toxin, recently isolated from a pathogenic strain of Escherichia coli, which is believed to exert its toxic activity via formation of pores in the target cell membrane. With the goal of understanding the involvement of different segments of hemolysin E in the membrane interaction and assembly of the toxin, a conserved, amphipathic leucine zipper-like motif has been identified. In order to evaluate the possible structural and functional roles of this segment in HlyE, a 30-residue peptide (H-205) corresponding to the leucine zipper motif (amino acid 205-234) and two mutant peptides of the same size were synthesized and labeled by fluorescent probes at their N termini. The results show that the wild-type H-205 binds to both zwitterionic (PC/Chol) and negatively charged (PC/PG/Chol) phospholipid vesicles and also self-assemble therein. Detailed membrane-binding experiments revealed that this synthetic motif (H-205) formed large aggregates and inserted into the bilayer of only negatively charged lipid vesicles but not of zwitterionic membrane. Although both the mutants bound to zwitterionic and negatively charged lipid vesicles, neither of them inserted into the lipid bilayers nor assembled in any of these lipid vesicles. Furthermore, H-205 adopted a significant helical structure in membrane mimetic environments and induced the permeation of monovalent ions and release of entrapped calcein across the phospholipid vesicles more efficiently than the mutant peptides. The results presented here indicate that this H-205 (amino acid 205-234) segment may be an important structural element in hemolysin E, which could play a significant role in the binding and assembly of the toxin in the target cell membrane and its destabilization.  相似文献   

15.
Amyloid plaques composed of the peptide Abeta are an integral part of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. We have modeled the process of amyloid plaque growth by monitoring the deposition of soluble Abeta onto amyloid in AD brain tissue or synthetic amyloid fibrils and show that it is mediated by two distinct kinetic processes. In the first phase, "dock", Abeta addition to the amyloid template is fully reversible (dissociation t(1/2) approximately 10 min), while in the second phase, "lock", the deposited peptide becomes irreversibly associated (dissociation t(1/2) > 1000 min) with the template in a time-dependent manner. The most recently deposited peptide dissociates first while Abeta previously deposited becomes irreversibly "locked" onto the template. Thus, the transition from monomer to neurotoxic amyloid is mediated by interaction with the template, a mechanism that has also been proposed for the prion diseases. Interestingly, two Abeta peptides bearing primary sequence alterations implicated in heritable Abeta amyloidoses displayed faster lock-phase kinetics than wild-type Abeta. Inhibiting the initial weak docking interaction between depositing Abeta and the template is a viable therapeutic target to prevent the critical conformational transition in the conversion of Abeta((solution)) to Abeta((amyloid)) and thus prevent stable amyloid accumulation. While thermodynamics suggest that inhibiting amyloid assembly would be difficult, the present study illustrates that the protein misfolding diseases are kinetically vulnerable to intervention.  相似文献   

16.
Liu D  Xu Y  Feng Y  Liu H  Shen X  Chen K  Ma J  Jiang H 《Biochemistry》2006,45(36):10963-10972
Abeta peptides cleaved from the amyloid precursor protein are the main components of senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease. Abeta peptides adopt a conformation mixture of random coil, beta-sheet, and alpha-helix in solution, which makes it difficult to design inhibitors based on the 3D structures of Abeta peptides. By targeting the C-terminal beta-sheet region of an Abeta intermediate structure extracted from molecular dynamics simulations of Abeta conformational transition, a new inhibitor that abolishes Abeta fibrillation was discovered using virtual screening in conjunction with thioflavin T fluorescence assay and atomic force microscopy determination. Circular dichroism spectroscopy demonstrated that the binding of the inhibitor increased the beta-sheet content of Abeta peptides either by stabilizing the C-terminal beta-sheet conformation or by inducing the intermolecular beta-sheet formation. It was proposed that the inhibitor prevented fibrillation by blocking interstrand hydrogen bond formation of the pleated beta-sheet structure commonly found in amyloid fibrils. The study not only provided a strategy for inhibitor design based on the flexible structures of amyloid peptides but also revealed some clues to understanding the molecular events involved in Abeta aggregation.  相似文献   

17.
The disruption of intracellular calcium homeostasis plays a central role in the pathology of Alzheimer's disease, which is also characterized by accumulation of the amyloid-beta peptides Abeta40 and Abeta42. These amphipathic peptides may become associated with neuronal membranes and affect their barrier function, resulting in the loss of calcium homeostasis. This suggestion has been extensively investigated by exposing protein-free model membranes, either vesicles or planar bilayers, to soluble Abeta. Primarily unstructured Abeta has been shown to undergo a membrane-induced conformational change to either primarily beta-structure or helical structure, depending, among other factors, on the model membrane composition. Association of Abeta renders lipid bilayers permeable to ions but there is dispute whether this is due to the formation of discrete transmembrane ion channels of Abeta peptides, or to a non-specific perturbation of bilayer integrity by lipid head group-associated Abeta. Here, we have attempted incorporation of Abeta in the hydrophobic core of zwitterionic bilayers, the most simple model membrane system, by preparing proteoliposomes by hydration of a mixed film of Abeta peptides and phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids. Despite the use of a solvent mixture in which Abeta40 and Abeta42 are almost entirely helical, the Abeta analogs were beta-structured in the resulting vesicle dispersions. When Abeta40-containing vesicles were fused into a zwitterionic planar bilayer, the typical irregular "single channel-like" conductance of Abeta was observed. The maximum conductance increased with additional vesicle fusion, while still exhibiting single channel-like behavior. Supported bilayers formed from Abeta40/PC vesicles did not exhibit any channel-like topological features, but the bilayer destabilized in time. Abeta40 was present primarily as beta-sheets in supported multilayers formed from the same vesicles. The combined observations argue for a non-specific perturbation of zwitterionic bilayers by surface association of small amphipathic Abeta40 assemblies.  相似文献   

18.
Presenilin 1 (PS1) plays an essential role in intramembranous "gamma-secretase" processing of several type I membrane proteins, including the beta-amyloid precursor proteins (APP) and Notch1. In this report, we examine the activity of two familial Alzheimer's disease-linked PS1 variants on the production of secreted Abeta peptides and the effects of L-685,458, a potent gamma-secretase inhibitor, on inhibition of Abeta peptides from cells expressing these PS1 variants. We now report that PS1 variants enhance the production and secretion of both Abeta1-42 and Abeta1-40 peptides. More surprisingly, whereas the IC(50) for inhibition of Abeta1-40 peptide production from cells expressing wild-type PS1 is approximately 1.5 microm, cells expressing the PS1deltaE9 mutant PS1 exhibit an IC(50) of approximately 4 microm. Immunoprecipitation and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry reveal that the levels of Abeta1-43 peptides are elevated in medium of PS1deltaE9 cells treated with higher concentrations of inhibitor. The differential effects of wild-type and mutant PS1 on gamma-secretase production of Abeta peptides and the disparity in sensitivity of these peptides to a potent gamma-secretase suggest that PS may be necessary, but not sufficient, to catalyze hydrolysis at the scissile bonds that generate the termini of Abeta1-40 and Abeta1-42 peptides.  相似文献   

19.
Oxidative stress is observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain, including protein oxidation and lipid peroxidation. One of the major pathological hallmarks of AD is the brain deposition of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta). This 42-mer peptide is derived from the beta-amyloid precursor protein (APP) and is associated with oxidative stress in vitro and in vivo. Mutations in the PS-1 and APP genes, which increase production of the highly amyloidogenic amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta42), are the major causes of early onset familial AD. Several lines of evidence suggest that enhanced oxidative stress, inflammation, and apoptosis play important roles in the pathogenesis of AD. In the present study, primary neuronal cultures from knock-in mice expressing mutant human PS-1 and APP were compared with those from wild-type mice, in the presence or absence of various oxidizing agents, viz, Abeta(1-42), H2O2 and kainic acid (KA). APP/PS-1 double mutant neurons displayed a significant basal increase in oxidative stress as measured by protein oxidation, lipid peroxidation, and 3-nitrotyrosine when compared with the wild-type neurons (p < 0.0005). Elevated levels of human APP, PS-1 and Abeta(1-42) were found in APP/PS-1 cultures compared with wild-type neurons. APP/PS-1 double mutant neuron cultures exhibited increased vulnerability to oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis induced by Abeta(1-42), H2O2 and KA compared with wild-type neuronal cultures. The results are consonant with the hypothesis that Abeta(1-42)-associated oxidative stress and increased vulnerability to oxidative stress may contribute significantly to neuronal apoptosis and death in familial early onset AD.  相似文献   

20.
One of the familial forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD) encodes the amyloid-beta precursor protein (AbetaPP) substitution mutation V717F. This mutation is relevant to AD research, since it has been utilized to generate transgenic mice models to study AD pathology and therapeutic interventions. Amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides were obtained from the cerebral tissue of three familial AD subjects carrying the AbetaPP V717F mutation. A combination of ultracentrifugation, size-exclusion, and reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography, tryptic and cyanogen bromide hydrolysis, amino acid analysis, and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization and surface-enhanced laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry was used to characterize the familial AD mutant Abeta peptides. The AbetaPP V717F mutation, located 4-6 residues beyond the wild-type AbetaPP gamma-secretase cleavage site, yielded longer Abeta peptides with C termini between residues 43 and 54. In the cerebral cortex these peptides aggregated into thin water- and SDS-insoluble amyloid bundles that condensed into flocculent spherical plaques. In the leptomeningeal arteries the amyloid was deposited in moderate amounts and was primarily composed of the shorter and more soluble Abeta species ending at residues 40, 42, and 44. The single V717F mutation in AbetaPP results in distinctive and drastic changes in the length and tertiary structure of Abeta peptides, which appear to be responsible for the earlier clinical manifestations of dementia and death of these patients.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号