|
Biological Research 2000
Amyloid-?-peptide reduces copper(II) to copper(I) independent of its aggregation stateDOI: 10.4067/S0716-97602000000200012 Keywords: a? peptide, amyloid fibrils, copper reduction, oxidative damage, alzheimer?s disease. Abstract: alzheimer?s disease (ad) is characterized by the deposition of amyloid b-peptide (a?) and neuronal degeneration in brain regions involved in learning and memory. one of the leading etiologic hypotheses regarding ad is the involvement of free radical-mediated oxidative stress in neuronal degeneration. recent evidence suggests that metals concentrated in amyloid deposits may contribute to the oxidative insults observed in ad-affected brains. we hypothesized that a? peptide in the presence of copper enhances its neurotoxicity generating free radicals via copper reduction. in the present study, we have examined the effect of the aggregation state of amyloid-?-peptide on copper reduction. in independent experiments we measured the copper-reducing ability of soluble and fibrillar a?1-40 forms by bathocuproine assays. as it was previously observed for the amyloid precursor protein (app), the a? peptide showed copper-reducing ability. the capacity of a? to reduce copper was independent of the aggregation state. finally, the a? peptide derived from the human sequence has a greater effect than the a? peptide derived from the rat sequence, suggesting that histidine 13 may play a role in copper reduction. in agreement with this possibility, the a? peptide reduces less copper in the presence of exogenous histidine
|