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1.
We describe here the use of cysteine substitution mutants in the Alzheimer disease amyloid plaque peptide Abeta-(1-40) to probe amyloid fibril structure and stabilization. In one approach, amyloid fibrils were grown from Cys mutant peptides under reducing conditions and then challenged with an alkylating agent to probe solvent accessibility of different residues in the fibril. In another approach, monomeric Cys mutants, either in the thiol form or modified with iodoacetic acid or methyl iodide, were grown into amyloid fibrils, and the equilibrium position at the end of the amyloid formation reaction was quantified by determining the concentration of monomeric Abeta. The DeltaG values of fibril elongation obtained were then compared in order to provide information on the environment of each residue side chain in the fibril. In general, Cys residues in the N and C termini of Abeta-(1-40) were not only accessible to alkylation in the fibril state but also, when modified in the monomeric state, did not greatly impact fibril stability; these observations were consistent with previous indications that these portions of the peptide are not part of the amyloid core. In contrast, residues 16-19 and 31-34 were not only uniformly inaccessible to alkylation in the fibril state, but their modification with the negatively charged carboxymethyl group in monomeric Abeta also destabilized fibril elongation, confirming other data showing that these segments are likely packed into a hydrophobic amyloid core. Residues 20, 30, and 35, flanking these implicated beta-sandwich regions, are accessible to alkylation in the fibril indicating a location in solvent exposed structure.  相似文献   

2.
We report investigations of the morphology and molecular structure of amyloid fibrils comprised of residues 10-40 of the Alzheimer's beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta(10-40)), prepared under various solution conditions and degrees of agitation. Omission of residues 1-9 from the full-length Alzheimer's beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta(1-40)) did not prevent the peptide from forming amyloid fibrils or eliminate fibril polymorphism. These results are consistent with residues 1-9 being disordered in Abeta(1-40) fibrils, and show that fibril polymorphism is not a consequence of disorder in residues 1-9. Fibril morphology was analyzed by atomic force and electron microscopy, and secondary structure and inter-side-chain proximity were probed using solid-state NMR. Abeta(1-40) fibrils were found to be structurally compatible with Abeta(10-40): Abeta(1-40) fibril fragments were used to seed the growth of Abeta(10-40) fibrils, with propagation of fibril morphology and molecular structure. In addition, comparison of lyophilized and hydrated fibril samples revealed no effect of hydration on molecular structure, indicating that Abeta(10-40) fibrils are unlikely to contain bulk water.  相似文献   

3.
A subset of Alzheimer disease cases is caused by autosomal dominant mutations in genes encoding the amyloid beta-protein precursor or presenilins. Whereas some amyloid beta-protein precursor mutations alter its metabolism through effects on Abeta production, the pathogenic effects of those that alter amino acid residues within the Abeta sequence are not fully understood. Here we examined the biophysical effects of two recently described intra-Abeta mutations linked to early-onset familial Alzheimer disease, the D7N Tottori-Japanese and H6R English mutations. Although these mutations do not affect Abeta production, synthetic Abeta(1-42) peptides carrying D7N or H6R substitutions show enhanced fibril formation. In vitro analysis using Abeta(1-40)-based mutant peptides reveal that D7N or H6R mutations do not accelerate the nucleation phase but selectively promote the elongation phase of amyloid fibril formation. Notably, the levels of protofibrils generated from D7N or H6R Abeta were markedly inhibited despite enhanced fibril formation. These N-terminal Abeta mutations may accelerate amyloid fibril formation by a unique mechanism causing structural changes of Abeta peptides, specifically promoting the elongation process of amyloid fibrils without increasing metastable intermediates.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Several proteins and peptides that can convert from alpha-helical to beta-sheet conformation and form amyloid fibrils, including the amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) and the prion protein, contain a discordant alpha-helix that is composed of residues that strongly favor beta-strand formation. In their native states, 37 of 38 discordant helices are now found to interact with other protein segments or with lipid membranes, but Abeta apparently lacks such interactions. The helical propensity of the Abeta discordant region (K16LVFFAED23) is increased by introducing V18A/F19A/F20A replacements, and this is associated with reduced fibril formation. Addition of the tripeptide KAD or phospho-L-serine likewise increases the alpha-helical content of Abeta(12-28) and reduces aggregation and fibril formation of Abeta(1-40), Abeta(12-28), Abeta(12-24), and Abeta(14-23). In contrast, tripeptides with all-neutral, all-acidic or all-basic side chains, as well as phosphoethanolamine, phosphocholine, and phosphoglycerol have no significant effects on Abeta secondary structure or fibril formation. These data suggest that in free Abeta, the discordant alpha-helix lacks stabilizing interactions (likely as a consequence of proteolytic removal from a membrane-associated precursor protein) and that stabilization of this helix can reduce fibril formation.  相似文献   

7.
Although the amyloid fibrils formed from the Alzheimer's disease amyloid peptide Abeta are rich in cross-beta sheet, the peptide likely also exhibits turn and unstructured regions when it becomes incorporated into amyloid. We generated a series of single-proline replacement mutants of Abeta(1-40) and determined the thermodynamic stabilities of amyloid fibrils formed from these mutants to characterize the susceptibility of different residue positions of the Abeta sequence to proline substitution. The results suggest that the Abeta peptide, when engaged in the amyloid fibril, folds into a conformation containing three highly structured segments, consisting of contiguous sequence elements 15-21, 24-28, and 31-36, that are sensitive to proline replacement and likely to include the beta-sheet portions of the fibrils. Residues relatively insensitive to proline replacement fall into two groups: (a) residues 1-14 and 37-40 are likely to exist in relatively unstructured, flexible elements extruded from the beta-sheet-rich amyloid core; (b) residues 22, 23, 29 and 30 are likely to occupy turn positions between these three structured elements. Although destabilized, fibrils formed from Abeta(1-40) proline mutants are very similar in structure to wild-type fibrils, as indicated by hydrogen-deuterium exchange and other analysis. Interestingly, however, some proline mutations destabilize fibrils while at the same time increasing the number of amide protons protected from hydrogen exchange. This suggests that the stability of amyloid fibrils, rather than being driven exclusively by the formation of H-bonded beta-sheet, is achieved, as in globular proteins, through a balance of stabilizing and destabilizing forces. The proline scanning data are most compatible with a model for amyloid protofilament structure loosely resembling the parallel beta-helix folding motif, such that each Abeta(15-36) core region occupies a single layer of a prismatic, H-bonded stack of peptides.  相似文献   

8.
Seeding specificity in amyloid growth induced by heterologous fibrils   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Over residues 15-36, which comprise the H-bonded core of the amyloid fibrils it forms, the Alzheimer's disease plaque peptide amyloid beta (Abeta) possesses a very similar sequence to that of another short, amyloidogenic peptide, islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP). Using elongation rates to quantify seeding efficiency, we inquired into the relationship between primary sequence similarity and seeding efficiency between Abeta-(1-40) and amyloid fibrils produced from IAPP as well as other proteins. In both a solution phase and a microtiter plate elongation assay, IAPP fibrils are poor seeds for Abeta-(1-40) elongation, exhibiting weight-normalized efficiencies of only 1-2% compared with Abeta-(1-40) fibrils. Amyloid fibrils of peptides with sequences completely unrelated to Abeta also exhibit poor to negligible seeding ability for Abeta elongation. Fibrils from a number of point mutants of Abeta-(1-40) exhibit intermediate seeding abilities for wild-type Abeta elongation, with differing efficiencies depending on whether or not the mutation is in the amyloid core region. The results suggest that amyloid fibrils from different proteins exhibit structural differences that control seeding efficiencies. Preliminary results also suggest that identical sequences can grow into different conformations of amyloid fibrils as detected by seeding efficiencies. The results have a number of implications for amyloid structure and biology.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Polymerization of the soluble beta-amyloid peptide into highly ordered fibrils is hypothesized to be a causative event in the development of Alzheimer's disease. Understanding the interactions of Abeta with inhibitors on an atomic level is fundamental for the development of diagnostics and therapeutic approaches, and can provide, in addition, important indirect information of the amyloid fibril structure. We have shown recently that trRDCs can be measured in solution state NMR for peptide ligands binding weakly to amyloid fibrils. We present here the structures for two inhibitor peptides, LPFFD and DPFFL, and their structural models bound to fibrillar Abeta(14-23) and Abeta(1-40) based on transferred nuclear Overhauser effect (trNOE) and transferred residual dipolar coupling (trRDC) data. In a first step, the inhibitor peptide structure is calculated on the basis of trNOE data; the trRDC data are then validated on the basis of the trNOE-derived structure using the program PALES. The orientation of the peptide inhibitors with respect to Abeta fibrils is obtained from trRDC data, assuming that Abeta fibrils orient such that the fibril axis is aligned in parallel with the magnetic field. The trRDC-derived alignment tensor of the peptide ligand is then used as a restraint for molecular dynamics docking studies. We find that the structure with the lowest rmsd value is in agreement with a model in which the inhibitor peptide binds to the long side of an amyloid fibril. Especially, we detect interactions involving the hydrophobic core, residues K16 and E22/D23 of the Abeta sequence. Structural differences are observed for binding of the inhibitor peptide to Abeta14-23 and Abeta1-40 fibrils, respectively, indicating different fibril structure. We expect this approach to be useful in the rational design of amyloid ligands with improved binding characteristics.  相似文献   

11.
One of the major clinical features of Alzheimer's disease is the presence of extracellular amyloid plaques that are associated with glycosaminoglycan-containing proteoglycans. It has been proposed that proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans facilitate amyloid fibril formation and/or stabilize these aggregates. Characterization of proteoglycan-protein interactions has suggested that basic amino acids in a specific conformation are necessary for glycosaminoglycan binding. Amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta) has a cluster of basic amino acids at the N-terminus (residues 13-16, His-His-Gln-Lys), which are considered critical for glycosaminoglycan interactions. To understand the molecular recognition of glycosaminoglycans by Abeta, we have examined a series of synthetic peptides with systematic alanine substitutions. These include: His13-->Ala, His14-->Ala, Lys16-->Ala, His13His14Lys16-->Ala and Arg5His6-->Ala. Alanine substitutions result in differences in both the secondary and fibrous structure of Abeta1-28 as determined by circular dichroism spectroscopy and electron microscopy. The results demonstrate that the His-His-Gln-Lys region of Abeta, and in particular His13, is an important structural domain, as Ala substitution produces a dysfunctional folding mutant. Interaction of the substituted peptides with heparin and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans demonstrate that although electrostatic interactions contribute to binding, nonionic interactions such as hydrogen bonding and van der Waals packing play a role in glycosaminoglycan-induced Abeta folding and aggregation.  相似文献   

12.
We describe here details of the hydrogen-deuterium (H/D) exchange behavior of the Alzheimer's peptide Abeta(1)(-)(40), while it is a resident in the amyloid fibril, as determined by high-resolution solution NMR. Kinetics of H/D exchange in Abeta(1)(-)(40) fibrils show that about half the backbone amide protons exchange during the first 25 h, while the other half remain unexchanged because of solvent inaccessibility and/or hydrogen-bonded structure. After such a treatment for 25 h with D(2)O, fibrils of (15)N-enriched Abeta were dissolved in a mixture of 95% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and 5% dichloroacetic acid (DCA) and successive heteronuclear (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectra were collected to identify the backbone amides that did not exchange in the fibril. These studies showed that the N and C termini of the peptide are accessible to the solvent in the fibril state and the backbone amides of these residues are readily exchanged with bulk deuterium. In contrast, the residues in the middle of the peptide (residues 16-36) are mostly protected, suggesting that that many of the residues in this segment of the peptide are involved in a beta structure in the fibril. Two residues, G25 and S26, exhibit readily exchangeable backbone amide protons and therefore may be located on a turn or a flexible part of the peptide. Overall, the data substantially supports current models for how the Abeta peptide folds when it engages in the amyloid fibril structure, while also addressing some discrepancies between models.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Alzheimer's disease is characterized by the presence of insoluble, fibrous deposits composed principally of amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide. A number of studies have provided information on the fibril structure and on the factors affecting fiber formation, but the details of the fibril structure are not known. We used fluorescence quenching to investigate the solvent accessibility and surface charge of the soluble Abeta(1-40) dimer and amyloid fibrils. Analogs of Abeta(1-40) containing a single tryptophan were synthesized by substituting residues at positions 4, 10, 34, and 40 with tryptophan. Quenching measurements in the dimeric state indicate that the amino-terminal analogs (AbetaF4W and AbetaY10W) are accessible to polar quenchers, and the more carboxyl-terminal analog AbetaV34W is less accessible. AbetaV40W, on the other hand, exhibits a low degree of quenching, indicating that this residue is highly shielded from the solvent in the dimeric state. Correcting for the effect of reduced translational and rotational diffusion, fibril formation was associated with a selective increase in solvent exposure of residues 34 and 40, suggesting that a conformation change may take place in the carboxyl-terminal region coincident with the dimer to fibril transition.  相似文献   

15.
NMRsolution structures are reported for two mutants (K16E, K16F) of the soluble amyloid beta peptide Abeta(1-28). The structural effects of these mutations of a positively charged residue to anionic and hydrophobic residues at the alpha-secretase cleavage site (Lys16-Leu17) were examined in the membrane-simulating solvent aqueous SDS micelles. Overall the three-dimensional structures were similar to that for the native Abeta(1-28) sequence in that they contained an unstructured N-terminus and a helical C-terminus. These structural elements are similar to those seen in the corresponding regions of full-length Abeta peptides Abeta(1-40) and Abeta(1-42), showing that the shorter peptides are valid model systems. The K16E mutation, which might be expected to stabilize the macrodipole of the helix, slightly increased the helix length (residues 13-24) relative to the K16F mutation, which shortened the helix to between residues 16 and 24. The observed sequence-dependent control over conformation in this region provides an insight into possible conformational switching roles of mutations in the amyloid precursor protein from which Abeta peptides are derived. In addition, if conformational transitions from helix to random coil to sheet precede aggregation of Abeta peptides in vivo, as they do in vitro, the conformation-inducing effects of mutations at Lys16 may also influence aggregation and fibril formation.  相似文献   

16.
Antzutkin ON  Leapman RD  Balbach JJ  Tycko R 《Biochemistry》2002,41(51):15436-15450
We describe electron microscopy (EM), scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on amyloid fibrils formed by the 42-residue beta-amyloid peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease (Abeta(1)(-)(42)) and by residues 10-35 of the full-length peptide (Abeta(10)(-)(35)). These measurements place constraints on the supramolecular structure of the amyloid fibrils, especially the type of beta-sheets present in the characteristic amyloid cross-beta structural motif and the assembly of these beta-sheets into a fibril. EM images of negatively stained Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils and measurements of fibril mass per length (MPL) by STEM show a strong dependence of fibril morphology and MPL on pH. Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils formed at pH 3.7 are single "protofilaments" with MPL equal to twice the value expected for a single cross-beta layer. Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils formed at pH 7.4 are apparently pairs of protofilaments or higher order bundles. EM and STEM data for Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils indicate that protofilaments with MPL equal to twice the value expected for a single cross-beta layer are also formed by Abeta(1)(-)(42) and that these protofilaments exist singly and in pairs at pH 7.4. Solid-state NMR measurements of intermolecular distances in Abeta(10)(-)(35) fibrils, using multiple-quantum (13)C NMR, (13)C-(13)C dipolar recoupling, and (15)N-(13)C dipolar recoupling techniques, support the in-register parallel beta-sheet organization previously established by Lynn, Meredith, Botto, and co-workers [Benzinger et al. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 13407-13412; Benzinger et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 3491-3499] and show that this beta-sheet organization is present at pH 3.7 as well as pH 7.4 despite the differences in fibril morphology and MPL. Solid-state NMR measurements of intermolecular distances in Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils, which represent the first NMR data on Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils, also indicate an in-register parallel beta-sheet organization. These results, along with previously reported data on Abeta(1)(-)(40) fibrils, suggest that the supramolecular structures of Abeta(10)(-)(35), Abeta(1)(-)(40), and Abeta(1)(-)(42) fibrils are quite similar. A schematic structural model of these fibrils, consistent with known experimental EM, STEM, and solid-state NMR data, is presented.  相似文献   

17.
Although the gross morphology of amyloid fibrils is fairly well understood, very little is known about how the constituent polypeptides fold within the amyloid folding motif. In the experiments reported here, we used trypsin and chymotrypsin to conduct limited proteolysis studies on synthetic amyloid fibrils composed of the Alzheimer's disease peptide Abeta(1-40). In both reactions, the extreme N-terminal proteolytic fragment is released from fibrils as rapidly as it is from the Abeta monomer, while other proteolytic fragments are generated much more slowly. Furthermore, aggregated material isolated by centrifugation of intermediate digestion time points from both proteases contains, in addition to full-length material, peptides that possess mature C-termini but truncated N-termini. These data strongly suggest that the N-terminal region of Abeta is not involved in the beta-sheet network of the amyloid fibril, while the C-terminus is essentially completely engaged in protective-presumably beta-sheet-structure. In both digests, release of the extreme N-terminal fragments of Abeta(1-40) reaches plateau values corresponding to about 80% of the total available Abeta. This suggests that there are two classes of peptides in the fibril: while the majority of Abeta molecules have an exposed N-terminus, about 20% of the peptides have an N-terminus that is protected from proteolysis within the fibril structure. The most likely cause of this heterogeneity is the lateral association of protofilaments into the fibril structure, which would be expected to generate a unique environment for those Abeta N-termini located at protofilament packing interfaces and/or in the interior core region between the packed protofilaments. This suggests that the N-terminal region of Abeta, while not directly involved in the beta-sheet network of the fibril, may contribute to fibril stability by participating in protofilament packing.  相似文献   

18.
Thermodynamics of A beta(1-40) amyloid fibril elongation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
  相似文献   

19.
The most well-established structural feature of amyloid fibrils is the cross-beta motif, an extended beta-sheet structure formed by beta-strands oriented perpendicular to the long fibril axis. Direct experimental identification of non-beta-strand conformations in amyloid fibrils has not been reported previously. Here we report the results of solid-state NMR measurements on amyloid fibrils formed by the 40-residue beta-amyloid peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease (Abeta(1-40)), prepared synthetically with pairs of (13)C labels at consecutive backbone carbonyl sites. The measurements probe the peptide backbone conformation in residues 24-30, a segment where a non-beta-strand conformation has been suggested by earlier sequence analysis, cross-linking experiments, and molecular modeling. Data obtained with the fpRFDR-CT, DQCSA, and 2D MAS exchange solid-state NMR techniques, which provide independent constraints on the phi and psi backbone torsion angles between the labeled carbonyl sites, indicate non-beta-strand conformations at G25, S26, and G29. These results represent the first site-specific identification and characterization of non-beta-strand peptide conformations in an amyloid fibril.  相似文献   

20.
The amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) is a principal component of insoluble amyloid plaques which are characteristic neuropathological features of Alzheimer's disease. Abeta also exists as a normal soluble protein that undergoes a pathogenic transition to an aggregated, fibrous form. This transition can be affected by extraneous proteinaceous and nonproteinaceous elements, such as zinc ions, which may promote aggregation and/or stabilization of the fibrils. Protein chelation of zinc is typically mediated by histidines, cysteines and carboxylates. Previous studies have demonstrated that the Abeta-Zn2+ binding site is localized within residues 6-28 and that histidines may serve as the principal sites of interaction. To localize key residues within this region, a series of Abeta peptides (residues 1-28) were synthesized that contained systematic His/Ala substitutions. Circular dichroism and electron microscopy were used to monitor the effects of Zn2+ on the peptide beta-sheet conformation and fibril aggregation. Our results indicate that substitution of either His13 or His14 but not His6 eliminates the zinc-mediated effects. These observations indicate a specific zinc binding site within Abeta that involves these central histidine residues.  相似文献   

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