6533b857fe1ef96bd12b5138
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Cholesterol binding to amyloid-β fibrils: A TEM study
J. Robin Harrissubject
AmyloidAmyloid beta-PeptidesCholesterolCholesterol bindingGeneral Physics and AstronomyUranyl acetateFibrillogenesismacromolecular substancesCell BiologyFibrilNegative stainMicellePolyethylene GlycolsCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundCholesterolMicroscopy Electron TransmissionchemistryStructural BiologyHumanslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)General Materials ScienceHydrogen peroxideMicellesdescription
There is increasing interest in the role of brain cholesterol in Alzheimer's disease and the contribution of cholesterol to the formation of amyloid plaques. This paper presents a TEM study showing the binding of soluble approximately 10 nm diameter cholesterol-PEG 600 micelles to amyloid-beta(1-42) (Abeta(1-42)) fibrils formed either in the presence of this cholesterol derivative or to preformed fibrils generated under four different fibrillogenesis conditions. Specimens negatively stained with uranyl acetate revealed that during 24 h fibrillogenesis at 37 degrees C the cholesterol-PEG micelles bound periodically to Abeta(1-42) protofibrils and apparently also formed a thin smooth unbroken coating on mature double helical fibrils. Preformed protofibrils, generated in water alone or in the presence of 0.1 mM cupric sulphate, also exhibited periodic binding of cholesterol-PEG micelles, indicating the inherently helical nature of the protofibril. Double helical mature Abeta(1-42) fibrils, generated in the presence of cholesterol microcrystals or hydrogen peroxide (1 mM), bound cholesterol-PEG micelles with no immediately apparent regularity and without creating a smooth coating. The differing capacities of the Abeta(1-42) protofibrils and mature double helical fibrils to bind cholesterol-PEG 600 may indicate differences in the accessibility of the micellar cholesterol to the purported Abeta(17-21) hydrophobic cholesterol-binding motif on the fibril surfaces.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2008-12-01 | Micron |