Esler W P, Stimson E R, Jennings J M, Ghilardi J R, Mantyh P W, Maggio J E
Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
J Neurochem. 1996 Feb;66(2):723-32. doi: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.1996.66020723.x.
The major pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease is the presence of a high density of amyloid plaques in the brain tissue of patients. The plaques are predominantly composed of human beta-amyloid peptide (A beta), a 39-43-mer peptide the neurotoxicity of which is related to its aggregation state. Previous work has demonstrated that certain metals that have been implicated as risk factors for Alzheimer's disease (Al, Fe, and Zn) also cause substantial aggregation of A beta. In particular, we reported that zinc cations at concentrations of > 10(-4) M dramatically accelerate the rate of A beta aggregation at physiological peptide concentrations at 37 degrees C in vitro. In the present study, we investigate the effect of Zn2+ on aggregation of radiolabeled and unlabeled human and rat A beta over a wide range of peptide concentrations in the presence and absence of salt and blocking protein. Aggregation was assayed by centrifugation and filtration using amino acid analysis, immunoassay, and gamma-counting for quantification over a wide range of concentrations of Zn2+ and A beta above and below physiological values. The results of this study demonstrate the following: (a) Radioiodinated A beta accurately tracked unlabeled A beta, (b) zinc concentrations of at least 10(-4) M were required to induce significant aggregation of A beta, and (c) rat and human A beta species were cleared from aqueous solutions by similar concentrations of zinc. These results stand in significant quantitative disagreement (approximately 100-fold in zinc concentration) with one previous study that reported significant aggregation of A beta by < 1 microM Zn2+. Differences between the present study and the latter study from another laboratory appear to result from inappropriate reliance on optical density to measure A beta concentrations and nonspecific loss of A beta to plastic in the absence of blocking protein.
阿尔茨海默病的主要病理特征是患者脑组织中存在高密度的淀粉样斑块。这些斑块主要由人β-淀粉样肽(Aβ)组成,Aβ是一种39至43个氨基酸残基的肽,其神经毒性与其聚集状态有关。先前的研究表明,某些被认为是阿尔茨海默病风险因素的金属(铝、铁和锌)也会导致Aβ大量聚集。特别是,我们报道在体外37℃生理肽浓度下,浓度大于10^(-4) M的锌阳离子会显著加速Aβ的聚集速率。在本研究中,我们研究了在存在和不存在盐及封闭蛋白的情况下,Zn2+在广泛的肽浓度范围内对放射性标记和未标记的人及大鼠Aβ聚集的影响。通过离心和过滤,使用氨基酸分析、免疫测定和γ计数在生理值上下的广泛Zn2+和Aβ浓度范围内进行定量分析来检测聚集情况。本研究结果表明:(a)放射性碘化Aβ能准确追踪未标记的Aβ;(b)至少需要10^(-4) M的锌浓度才能诱导Aβ显著聚集;(c)相似浓度的锌能从水溶液中清除大鼠和人Aβ。这些结果与之前一项研究在定量上存在显著差异(锌浓度相差约100倍),该研究报道小于1 μM的Zn2+就能使Aβ显著聚集。本研究与另一个实验室的后一项研究之间的差异似乎是由于不恰当地依赖光密度来测量Aβ浓度以及在没有封闭蛋白的情况下Aβ非特异性地损失到塑料中所致。