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Alzheimer's disease amyloid peptides interact with DNA, as proved by surface plasmon resonance




TekijätBarrantes A, Camero S, Garcia-Lucas A, Navarro PJ, Benitez MJ, Jiménez JS.

KustantajaBentham Science Publishers

Julkaisuvuosi2012

JournalCurrent Alzheimer Research

Lehden akronyymiCurr Alzheimer Res.

Vuosikerta9

Numero8

Aloitussivu924

Lopetussivu934

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2174/156720512803251101

Verkko-osoitehttps://www.eurekaselect.com/103096/article


Tiivistelmä

According to the amyloid hypothesis, abnormal processing of the β-amyloid precursor protein in Alzheimer's disease patients increases the production of β-amyloid toxic peptides, which, after forming highly aggregated fibrillar structures, lead to extracellular plaques formation, neuronal loss and dementia. However, a great deal of evidence has point to intracellular small oligomers of amyloid peptides, probably transient intermediates in the process of fibrillar structures formation, as the most toxic species. In order to study the amyloid-DNA interaction, we have selected here three different forms of the amyloid peptide: Aβ1-40, Aβ25-35 and a scrambled form of Aβ25-35. Surface Plasmon Resonance was used together with UV-visible spectroscopy, Electrophoresis and Electronic Microscopy to carry out this study. Our results prove that, similarly to the full length Aβ1-42, all conformations of toxic amyloid peptides, Aβ1-40 and Aβ25-35, may bind DNA. In contrast, the scrambled form of Aβ25-35, a non-aggregating and nontoxic form of this peptide, could not bind DNA. We conclude that although the amyloid-DNA interaction is closely related to the amyloid aggregation proneness, this cannot be the only factor which determines the interaction, since small oligomers of amyloid peptides may also bind DNA if their predominant negatively charged amino acid residues are previously neutralized.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:04