Roher A E, Lowenson J D, Clarke S, Wolkow C, Wang R, Cotter R J, Reardon I M, Zürcher-Neely H A, Heinrikson R L, Ball M J
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201.
J Biol Chem. 1993 Feb 15;268(5):3072-83.
The structure of beta-amyloid (beta A) from Alzheimer disease brains was examined to determine if post-translational modifications might be linked to the abnormal deposition of this peptide in the diseased tissue. The beta A peptides were isolated from the compact amyloid cores of neuritic plaques and separated from minor glycoprotein components by size-exclusion high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). This parenchymal beta A has a maximal length of 42 residues, but shorter forms with "ragged" NH2 termini are also present. Tryptic peptide analysis revealed heterogeneity in the beta A1-5 and beta A6-16 peptides, each of which eluted as four peaks on reverse phase HPLC. Amino acid composition and sequence analyses, mass spectrometry, enzymatic methylation, and stereoisomer determinations revealed that these multiple peptide forms resulted from structural rearrangements of the aspartyl residues at beta A positions 1 and 7. The L-isoaspartyl form predominates at each of these positions, whereas the D-isoaspartyl, L-aspartyl, and D-aspartyl forms are present in lesser amounts. beta A purified from the leptomeningeal microvasculature contains the same structural alterations as parenchymal beta A, but is 2 residues shorter at its COOH terminus. Using two different purification protocols, and using a synthetic beta A1-42 peptide as a control, we show that these modifications arose endogenously and were not caused by the experimental manipulations. The abundance of structurally altered aspartyl residues may profoundly affect the conformation of the beta A protein within plaque cores and thus significantly impact normal catabolic processes designed to limit its deposition. These alterations may therefore contribute to the production and stability of beta-amyloid deposits in Alzheimer brain tissue.
对阿尔茨海默病患者大脑中的β-淀粉样蛋白(βA)结构进行了研究,以确定翻译后修饰是否可能与该肽在患病组织中的异常沉积有关。从神经炎性斑块的致密淀粉样核心中分离出βA肽,并通过尺寸排阻高压液相色谱(HPLC)将其与少量糖蛋白成分分离。这种实质βA的最大长度为42个残基,但也存在具有“参差不齐”氨基末端的较短形式。胰蛋白酶肽分析显示βA1-5和βA6-16肽存在异质性,它们在反相HPLC上均以四个峰洗脱。氨基酸组成和序列分析、质谱分析、酶促甲基化分析以及立体异构体测定表明,这些多种肽形式是由βA位置1和7处天冬氨酰残基的结构重排产生的。在每个这些位置,L-异天冬氨酰形式占主导,而D-异天冬氨酰、L-天冬氨酰和D-天冬氨酰形式的含量较少。从软脑膜微血管中纯化的βA与实质βA具有相同的结构改变,但其羧基末端短2个残基。使用两种不同的纯化方案,并以合成的βA1-42肽作为对照,我们表明这些修饰是内源性产生的,并非由实验操作引起。结构改变的天冬氨酰残基的丰度可能会深刻影响斑块核心内βA蛋白的构象,从而显著影响旨在限制其沉积的正常分解代谢过程。因此,这些改变可能有助于阿尔茨海默病脑组织中β-淀粉样蛋白沉积物的产生和稳定性。