The aggregation paths and products of Aβ42 dimers are distinct from Aβ42 monomer

July 28, 2017

Title

The aggregation paths and products of Aβ42 dimers are distinct from Aβ42 monomer

Author

Tiernan Thomas O'Malley, William M. Wittbold, Sara Linse, Dominic M Walsh

Year

2016

Journal

Biochemistry

Abstract

Extracts of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) brain that contain what appear to be SDS-stable amyloid β-protein (Aβ) dimers potently block LTP and impair memory consolidation. Brain-derived dimers can be physically separated from Aβ monomer, consist primarily of Aβ42 and resist denaturation by powerful chaotropic agents. In nature, covalently cross-linked Aβ dimers could be generated in only one of two different ways - either by the formation of a dityrosine (DiY) or an isopeptide ε-(γ-glutamyl)-lysine (Q-K) bond. We enzymatically cross-linked recombinant Aβ42 monomer to produce DiY and Q-K dimers and then applied a range of biophysical methods to study their aggregation. Both Q-K and DiY dimers aggregate to form soluble assemblies distinct from the fibrillar aggregates formed by Aβ monomer. These results suggest that Aβ dimers allow the formation of soluble aggregates akin to those in aqueous extracts of AD brain. Thus it seems that Aβ dimers may play an important role in determining the formation of soluble rather than insoluble aggregates.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Aggregation, Biochemistry