Title : Amyloid Fibril Formation by a Synthetic Peptide from a Region of Human Acetylcholinesterase that Is Homologous to the Alzheimer's Amyloid-beta Peptide - Cottingham_2002_Biochemistry_41_13539 |
Author(s) : Cottingham MG , Hollinshead MS , Vaux DJ |
Ref : Biochemistry , 41 :13539 , 2002 |
Abstract :
A region near the C-terminus of human acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is weakly homologous with the N-terminus of the Alzheimer's disease amyloid-beta peptide. We report that a 14-amino acid synthetic polypeptide whose sequence corresponds to residues 586-599 of the human synaptic or T form of AChE assembles into amyloid fibrils under physiological conditions. The fibrils have all the classical characteristics of amyloid: they have a diameter of 6-7 nm and bind both Congo red and thioflavin-T. Furthermore, the kinetics of assembly indicate that fibril formation proceeds via a two-step nucleation-dependent polymerization pathway, and a transition in the peptide conformation from random coil to beta-sheet is observed during fibril formation using far-UV circular dichroism spectroscopy. We also show that the peptide in aggregated fibrillar form has a toxic effect upon PC-12 cells in vitro. AChE normally resides mainly on cholinergic neuronal membranes, but is abnormally localized to senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease. Recently, an in vitro interaction between AChE and A beta, the principal constituent of the amyloid fibrils in senile plaques, has been documented. The presence of a fibrillogenic region within AChE may be relevant to the interaction of AChE with amyloid fibrils formed by Abeta. |
PubMedSearch : Cottingham_2002_Biochemistry_41_13539 |
PubMedID: 12427014 |
Cottingham MG, Hollinshead MS, Vaux DJ (2002)
Amyloid Fibril Formation by a Synthetic Peptide from a Region of Human Acetylcholinesterase that Is Homologous to the Alzheimer's Amyloid-beta Peptide
Biochemistry
41 :13539
Cottingham MG, Hollinshead MS, Vaux DJ (2002)
Biochemistry
41 :13539