Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1926214 Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 2010 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

A signature feature of Alzheimer’s disease is the accumulation of plaques, composed of fibrillar amyloid-β protein (Aβ), in the brain parenchyma. Structural models of Aβ fibrils reveal an extensive β-sheet network with a hydrophobic core extending throughout the fibril axis. In this study, phenylalanines in the Aβ(1–40) sequence were substituted with tryptophan residues at either position 4 (F4W) or 19 (F19W) to probe the fibril environment. The F4W substitution did not alter self-assembly kinetics, while the F19W change slightly lengthened the lag phase without hindering fibril formation. The tryptophan fluorescence of Aβ(1–40) F19W, but not Aβ(1–40) F4W, underwent a marked blue shift during fibril formation and this shift was temporally correlated with thioflavin T binding. Isolated Aβ(1–40) F19W fibrils exhibited the largest fluorescence blue shifts consistent with W19 insertion into the Aβ(1–40) fibril inner core and direct probing of the substantially hydrophobic environment therein.

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