Structural alterations in the peptide backbone of beta-amyloid core protein may account for its deposition and stability in Alzheimer's disease
The structure of beta-amyloid (beta A) from Alzheimer disease brains was examined to determine if post-translational modifications might be linked to the abnormal deposition of this peptide in the diseased tissue. The beta A peptides were isolated from the compact amyloid cores of neuritic plaques a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1993-02, Vol.268 (5), p.3072-3083 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The structure of beta-amyloid (beta A) from Alzheimer disease brains was examined to determine if post-translational modifications
might be linked to the abnormal deposition of this peptide in the diseased tissue. The beta A peptides were isolated from
the compact amyloid cores of neuritic plaques and separated from minor glycoprotein components by size-exclusion high-pressure
liquid chromatography (HPLC). This parenchymal beta A has a maximal length of 42 residues, but shorter forms with "ragged"
NH2 termini are also present. Tryptic peptide analysis revealed heterogeneity in the beta A1-5 and beta A6-16 peptides, each
of which eluted as four peaks on reverse phase HPLC. Amino acid composition and sequence analyses, mass spectrometry, enzymatic
methylation, and stereoisomer determinations revealed that these multiple peptide forms resulted from structural rearrangements
of the aspartyl residues at beta A positions 1 and 7. The L-isoaspartyl form predominates at each of these positions, whereas
the D-isoaspartyl, L-aspartyl, and D-aspartyl forms are present in lesser amounts. beta A purified from the leptomeningeal
microvasculature contains the same structural alterations as parenchymal beta A, but is 2 residues shorter at its COOH terminus.
Using two different purification protocols, and using a synthetic beta A1-42 peptide as a control, we show that these modifications
arose endogenously and were not caused by the experimental manipulations. The abundance of structurally altered aspartyl residues
may profoundly affect the conformation of the beta A protein within plaque cores and thus significantly impact normal catabolic
processes designed to limit its deposition. These alterations may therefore contribute to the production and stability of
beta-amyloid deposits in Alzheimer brain tissue. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0021-9258(18)53661-9 |