1. Mutation of the Alzheimer's Disease Amyloid Gene in Hereditary Cerebral Hemorrhage, Dutch Type
- Author
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Blas Frangione, Michael D. Power, Ivan Lieberburg, Mark D. Carman, Willem Luyendijk, Ivan Fernandez-Madrid, Sjoerd G. van Duinen, Efrat Levy, and Gerard Th. A. M. Bots
- Subjects
Amyloid ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Down syndrome ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Amyloid beta-Protein Precursor ,Degenerative disease ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Senile plaques ,Protein Precursors ,Deoxyribonucleases, Type II Site-Specific ,Alleles ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Genes, Dominant ,Netherlands ,Aged, 80 and over ,Brain Chemistry ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,Amyloidosis ,DNA ,Exons ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry of Alzheimer's disease ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Endocrinology ,Mutation ,Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis ,Female ,Alzheimer's disease - Abstract
An amyloid protein that precipitates in the cerebral vessel walls of Dutch patients with hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis is similar to the amyloid protein in vessel walls and senile plaques in brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease, Down syndrome, and sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Cloning and sequencing of the two exons that encode the amyloid protein from two patients with this amyloidosis revealed a cytosine-to-guanine transversion, a mutation that caused a single amino acid substitution (glutamine instead of glutamic acid) at position 22 of the amyloid protein. The mutation may account for the deposition of this amyloid protein in the cerebral vessel walls of these patients, leading to cerebral hemorrhages and premature death.
- Published
- 1990
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