Kj. Marcinowski et al., SOLUTION STRUCTURE MODEL OF RESIDUES 1-28 OF THE AMYLOID-BETA PEPTIDEWHEN BOUND TO MICELLES, Journal of the American Chemical Society, 120(43), 1998, pp. 11082-11091
The major protein constituent of amyloid deposits in Alzheimer's disea
se is the alpha-peptide, which in solution can fold as a random coil,
monomeric alpha-helix, or oligomeric beta-sheet structure, the latter
structure being toxic and eventually precipitating as amyloid. In this
report, using circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spect
roscopic techniques, we demonstrate that in micelle solution the alpha
-helical structure is the predominate structural motif and that its st
ability is highly dependent on the pH and the surface charge of the mi
celle. A peptide fragment comprised of residues 1-28 of the beta-pepti
de [beta-(1-28)], which occupies the presumed extracellular domain of
the amyloid precursor protein and the negatively charged sodium dodecy
l sulfate (SDS), the positively charged dodecyltrimethylammonium chlor
ide (DTAC), and the zwitterionic, neutral dodecylphosphocholine (DPC),
was utilized. In SDS and DPC, nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectros
copy and the alpha H chemical shifts showed that at pH 2-3 there are t
wo alpha-helical regions located within the Ala2-Asp7 and Tyr10-Lys28
peptide regions. Temperature coefficients for the amide-NH established
that the 1-28 region is located at the micelle surface and does not i
nsert into the hydrophobic interior. Above pH 4, no alpha-helix forms
in DPC, whereas the Tyr10-Lys28 helix remained alpha-helical in SDS up
to pH 9.5. With DTAC, the alpha-helix formed at high pH, and below pH
4 only random coil was present. Most importantly, the present data de
monstrate Chat micelles prevent formation of the toxic beta-sheet stru
cture for the 1-28 region, which may eventually have therapeutic impli
cations for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.