APP717 missense mutation affects the ratio of amyloid beta protein species (A beta 1-42/43 and a beta 1-40) in familial Alzheimer's disease brain.

  1. A Tamaoka,
  2. A Odaka,
  3. Y Ishibashi,
  4. M Usami,
  5. N Sahara,
  6. N Suzuki,
  7. N Nukina,
  8. H Mizusawa,
  9. S Shoji and
  10. I Kanazawa
  1. Department of Neurology, University of Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.

    Abstract

    We have biochemically purified A beta from brains of two unrelated familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) pedigrees with the APP717 mutation (Val-->Ile) and from two sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) brains and characterized them by means of mass spectrometry and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. We observed two types of amyloid beta protein (A beta), the short-tail form (A beta 1-40) and the long-tail form (A beta 1-42/43), in sporadic AD and FAD brains, and found that the ratio of the long-tail form of A beta (A beta 1-42/43) to total A beta was increased in FAD brains. These in vivo results were confirmed in vitro using cultured cells transfected with three kinds of APP cDNAs bearing the APP717 mutations (Val-->Ile, Gly, or Phe). Taken together with the hypothesis that A beta 1-42/43 functions as a "seed" that increases the kinetics of amyloid fibril formation (Jarrett, J. T., and Lansbury, P. T., Jr. (1993) Cell 73, 1055-1058), we conclude that the APP717 missense mutation does not create new A beta species but promotes the increased accumulation of A beta 1-42/43 in the brain, which results in the enhancement of amyloid fibril formation from soluble A beta. These findings provide a causal relationship between this FAD genotype and the pathological phenotype of A beta deposition and senile plaque formation.

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