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1.
Aggregation and fibril formation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides Abeta40 and Abeta42 are central events in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease. Previous studies have established the ratio of Abeta40 to Abeta42 as an important factor in determining the fibrillogenesis, toxicity, and pathological distribution of Abeta. To better understand the molecular basis underlying the pathologic consequences associated with alterations in the ratio of Abeta40 to Abeta42, we probed the concentration- and ratio-dependent interactions between well defined states of the two peptides at different stages of aggregation along the amyloid formation pathway. We report that monomeric Abeta40 alters the kinetic stability, solubility, and morphological properties of Abeta42 aggregates and prevents their conversion into mature fibrils. Abeta40, at approximately equimolar ratios (Abeta40/Abeta42 approximately 0.5-1), inhibits (> 50%) fibril formation by monomeric Abeta42, whereas inhibition of protofibrillar Abeta42 fibrillogenesis is achieved at lower, substoichiometric ratios (Abeta40/Abeta42 approximately 0.1). The inhibitory effect of Abeta40 on Abeta42 fibrillogenesis is reversed by the introduction of excess Abeta42 monomer. Additionally, monomeric Abeta42 and Abeta40 are constantly recycled and compete for binding to the ends of protofibrillar and fibrillar Abeta aggregates. Whereas the fibrillogenesis of both monomeric species can be seeded by fibrils composed of either peptide, Abeta42 protofibrils selectively seed the fibrillogenesis of monomeric Abeta42 but not monomeric Abeta40. Finally, we also show that the amyloidogenic propensities of different individual and mixed Abeta species correlates with their relative neuronal toxicities. These findings, which highlight specific points in the amyloid peptide equilibrium that are highly sensitive to the ratio of Abeta40 to Abeta42, carry important implications for the pathogenesis and current therapeutic strategies of Alzheimer disease.  相似文献   

2.
Oxidative lipid membrane damage is known to promote the misfolding of Abeta42 into pathological beta structure. In fully developed senile plaques of Alzheimer's disease, however, it is the shorter and more soluble amyloid beta protein, Abeta40, that predominates. To investigate the role of oxidative membrane damage in the misfolding of Abeta40, we have examined its interaction with supported lipid monolayer membranes using internal reflection infrared spectroscopy. Oxidatively damaged lipids modestly increased Abeta40 accumulation, with adsorption kinetics and a conformation that are distinct from that of Abeta42. In stark contrast, pretreatment of oxidatively damaged monolayer membranes with Abeta42 vigorously promoted Abeta40 accumulation and misfolding. Pretreatment of saturated or undamaged membranes with Abeta42 had no such effect. Parallel studies of lipid bilayer vesicles using a dye binding assay to detect fibril formation and electron microscopy to examine morphology demonstrated that Abeta42 pretreatment of oxidatively damaged membranes promoted the formation of mature Abeta40 amyloid fibrils. We conclude that oxidative membrane damage and Abeta42 act synergistically at an early stage to promote fibril formation by Abeta40. This synergy could be detected within minutes using internal reflection spectroscopy, whereas a dye-binding assay required several days and much higher protein concentrations to demonstrate this synergy.  相似文献   

3.
Abeta40 protects non-toxic Abeta42 monomer from aggregation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abeta40 and Abeta42 are the predominant Abeta species in the human body. Toxic Abeta42 oligomers and fibrils are believed to play a key role in causing Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the role of Abeta40 in AD pathogenesis is not well established. Emerging evidence indicates a protective role for Abeta40 in AD pathogenesis. Although Abeta40 is known to inhibit Abeta42 fibril formation, it is not clear whether the inhibition acts on the non-toxic monomer or acts on the toxic Abeta42 oligomers. In contrast to conventional methods that detect the appearance of fibrils, in our study Abeta42 aggregation was monitored by the decreasing NMR signals from Abeta42 monomers. In addition, differential NMR isotope labelling enabled the selective observation of Abeta42 aggregation in a mixture of Abeta42 and Abeta40. We found Abeta40 monomers inhibit the aggregation of non-toxic Abeta42 monomers, in an Abeta42/Abeta40 ratio-dependent manner. NMR titration revealed that Abeta40 monomers bind to Abeta42 aggregates with higher affinity than Abeta42 monomers. Abeta40 can also release Abeta42 monomers from Abeta42 aggregates. Thus, Abeta40 likely protects Abeta42 monomers by competing for the binding sites on pre-existing Abeta42 aggregates. Combining our data with growing evidence from transgenic mice and human genetics, we propose that Abeta40 plays a critical, protective role in Alzheimer's by inhibiting the aggregation of Abeta42 monomer. Abeta40 itself, a peptide already present in the human body, may therefore be useful for AD prevention and therapy.  相似文献   

4.
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy analysis of 19 spin-labeled derivatives of the Alzheimer's amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide was used to reveal structural features of amyloid fibril formation. In the fibril, extensive regions of the peptide show an in-register, parallel arrangement. Based on the parallel arrangement and side chain mobility analysis we find the amyloid structure to be mostly ordered and specific, but we also identify more dynamic regions (N and C termini) and likely turn or bend regions (around residues 23-26). Despite their different aggregation properties and roles in disease, the two peptides, Abeta40 and Abeta42, homogeneously co-mix in amyloid fibrils suggesting that they possess the same structural architecture.  相似文献   

5.
Previously, we found that amyloid beta-protein (Abeta)1-42 exhibits neurotoxicity, while Abeta1-40 serves as an antioxidant molecule by quenching metal ions and inhibiting metal-mediated oxygen radical generation. Here, we show another neuroprotective action of nonamyloidogenic Abeta1-40 against Abeta1-42-induced neurotoxicity in culture and in vivo. Neuronal death was induced by Abeta1-42 at concentrations higher than 2 microm, which was prevented by concurrent treatment with Abeta1-40 in a dose-dependent manner. However, metal chelators did not prevent Abeta1-42-induced neuronal death. Circular dichroism spectroscopy showed that Abeta1-40 inhibited the beta-sheet transformation of Abeta1-42. Thioflavin-T assay and electron microscopy analysis revealed that Abeta1-40 inhibited the fibril formation of Abeta1-42. In contrast, Abeta1-16, Abeta25-35, and Abeta40-1 did not inhibit the fibril formation of Abeta1-42 nor prevent Abeta1-42-induced neuronal death. Abeta1-42 injection into the rat entorhinal cortex (EC) caused the hyperphosphorylation of tau on both sides of EC and hippocampus and increased the number of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-positive astrocytes in the ipsilateral EC, which were prevented by the concurrent injection of Abeta1-40. These results indicate that Abeta1-40 protects neurons from Abeta1-42-induced neuronal damage in vitro and in vivo, not by sequestrating metals, but by inhibiting the beta-sheet transformation and fibril formation of Abeta1-42. Our data suggest a mechanism by which elevated Abeta1-42/Abeta1-40 ratio accelerates the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in familial AD.  相似文献   

6.
Abeta40 and Abeta42 are the major forms of amyloid beta peptides (Abeta) in the brain. Although Abeta42 differs from Abeta40 by only two residues, Abeta42 is much more prone to aggregation and more toxic to neurons than Abeta40. To probe whether dynamics contribute to such dramatic difference in function, backbone ps-ns dynamics of native Abeta monomers were characterized by 15N spin relaxation at 273.3 K and 800 MHz. Abeta42 aggregates much faster than Abeta40 in the NMR tube. The effect of Abeta aggregation was removed from the relaxation measurement by interleaved data collection. R1, R2 and nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) values are similar in Abeta40 and Abeta42, except at the C terminus, indicating Abeta42 and Abeta40 monomers have identical global motions. Comparisons of the spectral density function J(0.87omegaH) and order parameters (S2) indicate that the Abeta42 C terminus is more rigid than the Abeta40 C terminus. At 280.4 K and 287.6 K, the Abeta42 C terminus remains more rigid than the Abeta40 C terminus, suggesting such a dynamical difference is likely present at the physiological temperature. The Abeta42 monomer likely has less configurational entropy due to restricted motion in the C terminus and may pay a smaller entropic price to form fibrils than the Abeta40 monomer. We hypothesize that the entropic difference between Abeta40 and Abeta42 monomers might partly account for the fact that Abeta42 is the major Abeta species in parenchymal senile plaques in most Alzheimer's diseased brains in spite of the predominance of Abeta40 in plasma. The increased rigidity of the Abeta42 C terminus is likely due to its pre-ordering for beta-conformation present in soluble oligomers and fibrils. The Abeta42 C terminus may therefore serve as an internal seed for aggregation.  相似文献   

7.
One of the major pathological features of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the presence of extracellular amyloid plaques that are composed predominantly of the amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta). Diffuse plaques associated with AD are composed predominantly of Abeta42, whereas senile plaques contain both Abeta40 and Abeta42. Recently, it has been suggested that diffuse plaque formation is initiated as a plasma membrane-bound Abeta species and that Abeta42 is the critical component. In order to investigate this hypothesis, we have examined Abeta42-membrane interactions using in situ atomic force microscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy. Our studies demonstrate the association of Abeta42 with planar bilayers composed of total brain lipids, which results initially in peptide aggregation and then fibre formation. Modulation of the cholesterol content is correlated with the extent of Abeta42-assembly on the bilayer surface. Although Abeta42 was not visualized directly on cholesterol-depleted bilayers, fluorescence anisotropy and fluorimetry demonstrate Abeta42-induced membrane changes. Our results demonstrate that the composition of the lipid bilayer governs the outcome of Abeta interactions.  相似文献   

8.
Amyloid fibrils associated with Alzheimer's disease and a wide range of other neurodegenerative diseases have a cross beta-sheet structure, where main chain hydrogen bonding occurs between beta-strands in the direction of the fibril axis. The surface of the beta-sheet has pronounced ridges and grooves when the individual beta-strands have a parallel orientation and the amino acids are in-register with one another. Here we show that in Abeta amyloid fibrils, Met35 packs against Gly33 in the C-terminus of Abeta40 and against Gly37 in the C-terminus of Abeta42. These packing interactions suggest that the protofilament subunits are displaced relative to one another in the Abeta40 and Abeta42 fibril structures. We take advantage of this corrugated structure to design a new class of inhibitors that prevent fibril formation by placing alternating glycine and aromatic residues on one face of a beta-strand. We show that peptide inhibitors based on a GxFxGxF framework disrupt sheet-to-sheet packing and inhibit the formation of mature Abeta fibrils as assayed by thioflavin T fluorescence, electron microscopy, and solid-state NMR spectroscopy. The alternating large and small amino acids in the GxFxGxF sequence are complementary to the corresponding amino acids in the IxGxMxG motif found in the C-terminal sequence of Abeta40 and Abeta42. Importantly, the designed peptide inhibitors significantly reduce the toxicity induced by Abeta42 on cultured rat cortical neurons.  相似文献   

9.
Amyloid fibril formation is a phenomenon common to many proteins and peptides, including amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. To clarify the mechanism of fibril formation and to create inhibitors, real-time monitoring of fibril growth is essential. Here, seed-dependent amyloid fibril growth of Abeta(1-40) was visualized in real-time at the single fibril level using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM) combined with the binding of thioflavin T, an amyloid-specific fluorescence dye. The clear image and remarkable length of the fibrils enabled an exact analysis of the rate of growth of individual fibrils, indicating that the fibril growth was a highly cooperative process extending the fibril ends at a constant rate. It has been known that Abeta amyloid formation is a stereospecific reaction and the stability is affected by l/d-amino acid replacement. Focusing on these aspects, we designed several analogues of Abeta(25-35), a cytotoxic fragment of Abeta(1-40), consisting of l and d-amino acid residues, and examined their inhibitory effects by TIRFM. Some chimeric Abeta(25-35) peptides inhibited the fibril growth of Abeta(25-35) strongly, although they could not inhibit the growth of Abeta(1-40). The results suggest that a more rational design of stereospecific inhibitors, combined with real-time monitoring of fibril growth, will be useful to invent a potent inhibitor preventing the amyloid fibril growth of Abeta(1-40) and other proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Soluble oligomers and protofibrils are widely thought to be the toxic forms of the Abeta42 peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. We have investigated the structure and formation of these assemblies using a new approach in atomic force microscopy (AFM) that yields high-resolution images of hydrated proteins and allows the structure of the smallest molecular weight (MW) oligomers to be observed and characterized. AFM images of monomers, dimers and other low MW oligomers at early incubation times (< 1h) are consistent with a hairpin structure for the monomeric Abeta42 peptide. The low MW oligomers are relatively compact and have significant order. The most constant dimension of these oligomers is their height (approximately 1-3 nm) above the mica surface; their lateral dimensions (width and length) vary between 5 nm and 10nm. Flat nascent protofibrils with lengths of over 40 nm are observed at short incubation times (< or = 3h); their lateral dimensions of 6-8 nm are consistent with a mass-per-length of 9 kDa/nm previously predicted for the elementary fibril subunit. High MW oligomers with lateral dimensions of 15-25 nm and heights ranging from 2-8 nm are common at high concentrations of Abeta. We show that an inhibitor designed to block the sheet-to-sheet packing in Abeta fibrils is able to cap the heights of these oligomers at approximately 4 nm. The observation of fine structure in the high MW oligomers suggests that they are able to nucleate fibril formation. AFM images obtained as a function of incubation time reveal a sequence of assembly from monomers to soluble oligomers and protofibrils.  相似文献   

11.
To better understand the physiologic excretion and/or catabolism of circulating peripheral amyloid beta (Abeta), we labeled human Abeta40 (monomeric, with predominant unordered structure) and Abeta42 (mixture of monomers and oligomers in approximately 50:50 ratio, rich in beta-sheet conformation) with either Na(125)I or (125)I-tyramine cellobiose, also known as the cell-trapping ligand procedure, testing their blood clearance and organ uptake in B6SJLF1/J mice. Irrespective of the labeling protocol, the peptide conformation, and the degree of oligomerization, both Abeta40 and Abeta42 showed a short half-life of 2.5-3.0 min. The liver was the major organ responsible for plasma clearance, accounting for >60% of the peptide uptake, followed by the kidney. In vivo, hepatocytes captured >90% of the radiolabeled peptides which, after endocytosis, were preferentially catabolized and excreted into the bile. Biliary excretion of intact as well as partially degraded Abeta species became obviously relevant at doses above 10 microg. The use of biotin-labeled Abeta allowed the visualization of the interaction with HepG2 cells in culture, whereas competitive inhibition experiments with unlabeled Abeta demonstrated the specificity of the binding. The capability of the liver to uptake, catabolize, and excrete large doses of Abeta, several orders of magnitude above its physiologic concentration, may explain not only the femtomolar plasma levels of Abeta but the little fluctuation observed with age and disease stages.  相似文献   

12.
One of the major pathological features of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the appearance of senile plaques characterized by extracellular aggregation of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) fibrils. Inhibition of Abeta fibril aggregation is therefore viewed as one possible method to halt the progression of AD. Salvianolic acid B (Sal B) is an active ingredient isolated from Salvia miltiorrhiza, a Chinese herbal medicine commonly used for the treatment of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disorders. Recent findings show that Sal B prevents Abeta-induced cytotoxicity in a rat neural cell line. To understand the mechanism of Sal B-mediated neuroprotection, its effects on the inhibition of Abeta1-40 fibril formation and destabilization of the preformed Abeta1-40 fibrils were studied. The results were obtained using Thioflavin T fluorescence assay and Abeta aggregating immunoassay. We found that Sal B can inhibit fibril aggregation (IC(50): 1.54-5.37 microM) as well as destabilize preformed Abeta fibril (IC(50): 5.00-5.19 microM) in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Sal B is a better aggregation inhibitor than ferulic acid but less active than curcumin in the inhibition of Abeta1-40 aggregation. In electron microscope study, Sal B-treated Abeta1-40 fibrils are seen in various stages of shortening or wrinkling with numerous deformed aggregates of amorphous structure. Circular dichroism data indicate that Sal B dose dependently prevents the formation of beta-structured aggregates of Abeta1-40. Addition of preincubated Sal B with Abeta1-42 significantly reduces its cytotoxic effects on human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. These results suggest that Sal B has therapeutic potential in the treatment of AD, and warrant its study in animal models.  相似文献   

13.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) involves amyloid beta (Abeta) accumulation, oxidative damage, and inflammation, and risk is reduced with increased antioxidant and anti-inflammatory consumption. The phenolic yellow curry pigment curcumin has potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities and can suppress oxidative damage, inflammation, cognitive deficits, and amyloid accumulation. Since the molecular structure of curcumin suggested potential Abeta binding, we investigated whether its efficacy in AD models could be explained by effects on Abeta aggregation. Under aggregating conditions in vitro, curcumin inhibited aggregation (IC(50) = 0.8 microM) as well as disaggregated fibrillar Abeta40 (IC(50) = 1 microM), indicating favorable stoichiometry for inhibition. Curcumin was a better Abeta40 aggregation inhibitor than ibuprofen and naproxen, and prevented Abeta42 oligomer formation and toxicity between 0.1 and 1.0 microM. Under EM, curcumin decreased dose dependently Abeta fibril formation beginning with 0.125 microM. The effects of curcumin did not depend on Abeta sequence but on fibril-related conformation. AD and Tg2576 mice brain sections incubated with curcumin revealed preferential labeling of amyloid plaques. In vivo studies showed that curcumin injected peripherally into aged Tg mice crossed the blood-brain barrier and bound plaques. When fed to aged Tg2576 mice with advanced amyloid accumulation, curcumin labeled plaques and reduced amyloid levels and plaque burden. Hence, curcumin directly binds small beta-amyloid species to block aggregation and fibril formation in vitro and in vivo. These data suggest that low dose curcumin effectively disaggregates Abeta as well as prevents fibril and oligomer formation, supporting the rationale for curcumin use in clinical trials preventing or treating AD.  相似文献   

14.
Manipulating the amyloid-beta aggregation pathway with chemical chaperones.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Amyloid-beta (Abeta) assembly into fibrillar structures is a defining characteristic of Alzheimer's disease that is initiated by a conformational transition from random coil to beta-sheet and a nucleation-dependent aggregation process. We have investigated the role of organic osmolytes as chemical chaperones in the amyloid pathway using glycerol to mimic the effects of naturally occurring molecules. Osmolytes such as the naturally occurring trimethylamine N-oxide and glycerol correct folding defects by preferentially hydrating partially denatured proteins and entropically stabilize native conformations and polymeric states. Trimethylamine N-oxide and glycerol were found to rapidly accelerate the Abeta random coil-to-beta-sheet conformational change necessary for fiber formation. This was accompanied by an immediate conversion of amorphous unstructured aggregates into uniform globular and possibly nucleating structures. Osmolyte-facilitated changes in Abeta hydration also affected the final stages of amyloid formation and mediated transition from the protofibrils to mature fibers that are observed in vivo. These findings suggest that hydration forces can be used to control fibril assembly and may have implications for the accumulation of Abeta within intracellular compartments such as the endoplasmic reticulum and in vitro modeling of the amyloid pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Considerable circumstantial evidence suggests that Abeta42 is the initiating molecule in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. However, the absolute requirement for Abeta42 for amyloid deposition has never been demonstrated in vivo. We have addressed this by developing transgenic models that express Abeta1-40 or Abeta1-42 in the absence of human amyloid beta protein precursor (APP) overexpression. Mice expressing high levels of Abeta1-40 do not develop overt amyloid pathology. In contrast, mice expressing lower levels of Abeta1-42 accumulate insoluble Abeta1-42 and develop compact amyloid plaques, congophilic amyloid angiopathy (CAA), and diffuse Abeta deposits. When mice expressing Abeta1-42 are crossed with mutant APP (Tg2576) mice, there is also a massive increase in amyloid deposition. These data establish that Abeta1-42 is essential for amyloid deposition in the parenchyma and also in vessels.  相似文献   

16.
The process of amyloid formation by the amyloid beta peptide (Abeta), i.e., the misassembly of Abetapeptides into soluble quaternary structures and, ultimately, amyloid fibrils, appears to be at the center of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. We have shown that abnormal oxidative metabolites, including cholesterol-derived aldehydes, modify Abeta and accelerate the early stages of amyloidogenesis (the formation of spherical aggregates). This process, which we have termed metabolite-initiated protein misfolding, could explain why hypercholesterolemia and inflammation are risk factors for sporadic AD. Herein, the mechanism by which cholesterol metabolites hasten Abeta 1-40 amyloidogenesis is explored, revealing a process that has at least two steps. In the first step, metabolites modify Abeta peptides by Schiff base formation. The Abeta-metabolite adducts form spherical aggregates by a downhill polymerization that does not require a nucleation step, dramatically accelerating Abeta aggregation. In agitated samples, a second step occurs in which fibrillar aggregates form, a step also accelerated by cholesterol metabolites. However, the metabolites do not affect the rate of fibril growth in seeded aggregation assays; their role appears to be in initiating amyloidogenesis by lowering the critical concentration for aggregation into the nanomolar range. Small molecules that block Schiff base formation inhibit the metabolite effect, demonstrating the importance of the covalent adduct. Metabolite-initiated amyloidogenesis offers an explanation for how Abeta aggregation could occur at physiological nanomolar concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
Protofibrils are transient structures observed during in vitro formation of mature amyloid fibrils and have been implicated as the toxic species responsible for cell dysfunction and neuronal loss in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other protein aggregation diseases. To better understand the roles of protofibrils in amyloid assembly and Alzheimer's disease, we characterized secondary structural features of these heterogeneous and metastable assembly intermediates. We chromatographically isolated different size populations of protofibrils from amyloid assembly reactions of Abeta(1-40), both wild type and the Arctic variant associated with early onset familial AD, and exposed them to hydrogen-deuterium exchange analysis monitored by mass spectrometry (HX-MS). We show that HX-MS can distinguish among unstructured monomer, protofibrils, and fibrils by their different protection patterns. We find that about 40% of the backbone amide hydrogens of Abeta protofibrils are highly resistant to exchange with deuterium even after 2 days of incubation in aqueous deuterated buffer, implying a very stable, presumably H-bonded, core structure. This is in contrast to mature amyloid fibrils, whose equally stable structure protects about 60% of the backbone amide hydrogens over the same time frame. We also find a surprising degree of specificity in amyloid assembly, in that wild type Abeta is preferentially excluded from both protofibrils and fibrils grown from an equimolar mixture of wild type and Arctic mutant peptides. These and other data are interpreted and discussed in terms of the role of protofibrils in fibril assembly and in disease.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The 39- to 42-residue-long amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta-peptide) forms filamentous structures in the neuritic plaques found in the neuropil of Alzheimer's disease patients. The assembly and deposition of Abeta-fibrils is one of the most important factors in the pathogenesis of this neurodegenerative disease. Although the structural analysis of amyloid fibrils is difficult, single-molecule methods may provide unique insights into their characteristics. In the present work, we explored the nanomechanical properties of amyloid fibrils formed from the full-length, most neurotoxic Abeta1-42 peptide, by manipulating individual fibrils with an atomic force microscope. We show that Abeta-subunit sheets can be mechanically unzipped from the fibril surface with constant forces in a reversible transition. The fundamental unzipping force (approximately 23 pN) was significantly lower than that observed earlier for fibrils formed from the Abeta1-40 peptide (approximately 33 pN), suggesting that the presence of the two extra residues (Ile and Ala) at the peptide's C-terminus result in a mechanical destabilization of the fibril. Deviations from the constant force transition may arise as a result of geometrical constraints within the fibril caused by its left-handed helical structure. The nanomechanical fingerprint of the Abeta1-42 is further influenced by the structural dynamics of intrafibrillar interactions.  相似文献   

20.
Neurodegenerative diseases associated with abnormal protein folding and ordered aggregation require an initial trigger which may be infectious, inherited, post-inflammatory or idiopathic. Proteolytic cleavage to generate vulnerable precursors, such as amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta) production via beta and gamma secretases in Alzheimer's Disease (AD), is one such trigger, but the proteolytic removal of these fragments is also aetiologically important. The levels of Abeta in the central nervous system are regulated by several catabolic proteases, including insulysin (IDE) and neprilysin (NEP). The known association of human acetylcholinesterase (hAChE) with pathological aggregates in AD together with its ability to increase Abeta fibrilization prompted us to search for proteolytic triggers that could enhance this process. The hAChE C-terminal domain (T40, AChE(575-614)) is an exposed amphiphilic alpha-helix involved in enzyme oligomerisation, but it also contains a conformational switch region (CSR) with high propensity for conversion to non-native (hidden) beta-strand, a property associated with amyloidogenicity. A synthetic peptide (AChE(586-599)) encompassing the CSR region shares homology with Abeta and forms beta-sheet amyloid fibrils. We investigated the influence of IDE and NEP proteolysis on the formation and degradation of relevant hAChE beta-sheet species. By combining reverse-phase HPLC and mass spectrometry, we established that the enzyme digestion profiles on T40 versus AChE(586-599), or versus Abeta, differed. Moreover, IDE digestion of T40 triggered the conformational switch from alpha- to beta-structures, resulting in surfactant CSR species that self-assembled into amyloid fibril precursors (oligomers). Crucially, these CSR species significantly increased Abeta fibril formation both by seeding the energetically unfavorable formation of amyloid nuclei and by enhancing the rate of amyloid elongation. Hence, these results may offer an explanation for observations that implicate hAChE in the extent of Abeta deposition in the brain. Furthermore, this process of heterologous amyloid seeding by a proteolytic fragment from another protein may represent a previously underestimated pathological trigger, implying that the abundance of the major amyloidogenic species (Abeta in AD, for example) may not be the only important factor in neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

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