Abstrakt: |
C-APP, a synthetic peptide corresponding to the C-terminal 20 amino acids of beta-amyloid precursor protein, forms amyloid fibrils in vitro. We investigated the effect of altering the C-APP sequence or deleting part of it on its ability to form amyloid fibrils. Substituting any single amino acid in the C-APP sequence with alanine did not prevent the formation of CAPP-like fibrils. Peptides with single or multiple substitutions that included T11, F14, F15, or Q19 showed reduced fibril-forming capacity while those with K1 and/or K13 replaced with alanine or glutamic acid showed enhanced capacity. When P10 or F14 was replaced with alanine, the fibrils were less congophilic than C-APP fibrils. All of the truncated peptides that were able to form fibrils contained at least 9 amino acids from the N-terminus of C-APP or amino acids 7-20 from the C-terminus. However, several peptides that met these criteria, but started at Q3 or contained only 2-4 amino acids C-terminal to P-10, failed to form many or typical fibrils. Peptides that contained the C-APP sequence plus 5-20 adjacent amino acids from the beta-amyloid precursor protein formed fibrils less readily than C-APP and most of the fibrils were not congophilic. The exception was CAPP-30, which formed moderate amounts of congophilic fibrils resembling C-APP fibrils morphologically. Therefore, proteolysis which releases C-APP from these peptides (except CAPP-30) would be predicted to enhance their amyloidogenicity. These results suggest that several features of C-APP peptide may be important in fibril formation. One of these features is the length of the peptide, with lengths of about 10, 20, or 30 amino acids, favoring fibril formation. |