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A Synthetic Peptide Blocking the Apolipoprotein E/β-Amyloid Binding Mitigates β-Amyloid Toxicity and Fibril Formation in Vitro and Reduces β-Amyloid Plaques in Transgenic Mice

Authors :
Henrieta Scholtzova
Paul M. Mathews
Yong-Sheng Li
Stephen D. Schmidt
Marcin Sadowski
Thomas Wisniewski
James A. Ripellino
Joanna Pankiewicz
John D. Fryer
Einar M. Sigurdsson
David M. Holtzman
Source :
The American Journal of Pathology. 165:937-948
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2004.

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with accumulation of beta-amyloid (Abeta). A major genetic risk factor for sporadic AD is inheritance of the apolipoprotein (apo) E4 allele. ApoE can act as a pathological chaperone of Abeta, promoting its conformational transformation from soluble Abeta into toxic aggregates. We determined if blocking the apoE/Abeta interaction reduces Abeta load in transgenic (Tg) AD mice. The binding site of apoE on Abeta corresponds to residues 12 to 28. To block binding, we synthesized a peptide containing these residues, but substituted valine at position 18 to proline (Abeta12-28P). This changed the peptide's properties, making it non-fibrillogenic and non-toxic. Abeta12-28P competitively blocks binding of full-length Abeta to apoE (IC50 = 36.7 nmol). Furthermore, Abeta12-28P reduces Abeta fibrillogenesis in the presence of apoE, and Abeta/apoE toxicity in cell culture. Abeta12-28P is blood-brain barrier-permeable and in AD Tg mice inhibits Abeta deposition. Tg mice treated with Abeta12-28P for 1 month had a 63.3% reduction in Abeta load in the cortex (P = 0.0043) and a 59.5% (P = 0.0087) reduction in the hippocampus comparing to age-matched control Tg mice. Antibodies against Abeta were not detected in sera of treated mice; therefore the observed therapeutic effect of Abeta12-28P cannot be attributed to an antibody clearance response. Our experiments demonstrate that compounds blocking the interaction between Abeta and its pathological chaperones may be beneficial for treatment of beta-amyloid deposition in AD.

Details

ISSN :
00029440
Volume :
165
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e91e2f3bc8e413f6d750484f48f8f001
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9440(10)63355-x