[HTML][HTML] Chemical characterization of A beta 17-42 peptide, a component of diffuse amyloid deposits of Alzheimer disease

E Gowing, AE Roher, AS Woods, RJ Cotter… - Journal of Biological …, 1994 - Elsevier
E Gowing, AE Roher, AS Woods, RJ Cotter, M Chaney, SP Little, MJ Ball
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1994Elsevier
A peptide corresponding to the amino acid sequence of A beta 17-42 (
LVFFAEDVGSNKGAIIGLMVGGVVIA) was isolated from Alzheimer Disease patient brains
containing large deposits of diffuse-type amyloid. Brain homogenates were lysed in SDS
and submitted to high speed centrifugations. A beta peptides were purified by size exclusion
chromatography on Superose 12 and TSK 3000 SW columns. An A beta peptide with M (r) of
3,000 was recovered that on automatic gas-phase Edman degradation yielded the amino …
A peptide corresponding to the amino acid sequence of A beta 17-42 (LVFFAEDVGSNKGAIIGLMVGGVVIA) was isolated from Alzheimer Disease patient brains containing large deposits of diffuse-type amyloid. Brain homogenates were lysed in SDS and submitted to high speed centrifugations. A beta peptides were purified by size exclusion chromatography on Superose 12 and TSK 3000 SW columns. An A beta peptide with M(r) of 3,000 was recovered that on automatic gas-phase Edman degradation yielded the amino acid sequence of A beta starting at residue 17 (Leu). The 3-kDa peptide was subsequently hydrolyzed with trypsin and reacted with CNBr, and the resulting peptides were separated by reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography and characterized by amino acid analyses, peptide microsequencing, and mass spectrometry. Hydrolysis of beta-amyloid precursor protein 695 at Lys612-Leu613 or at Lys16-Leu17 of its A beta 1-42 derivative prevents the generation of neurotoxic A beta filaments, thus leading to the formation of A beta 17-42 localized in the diffuse amyloid deposits. An outstanding feature in the pathology of Alzheimer Disease is that the predominant A beta peptides have their C termini at position 42, whether in the cores of the neuritic plaques, in the vascular walls, or in the diffuse deposits. Based on these observations, we postulate that the accumulation of insoluble A beta N-42 in Alzheimer Disease is due to the anomalous processing of the C-terminal region.
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