Publication | Open Access
Sequestration of Copper from β-Amyloid Promotes Selective Lysis by Cyclen-Hybrid Cleavage Agents
120
Citations
38
References
2008
Year
Molecular BiologyNeurochemical BiomarkersChemical BiologyOxidative StressAlzheimer's DiseaseProtein MisfoldingCyclen-hybrid Cleavage AgentsProteomicsAbeta Recognition MotifsBiochemistryAlzheimer DiseaseBiomolecular EngineeringAbeta AggregationNeurodegenerative DiseasesNatural SciencesMetalloproteinBioactive MetalBiotechnologyMedicine
Decelerated degradation of beta-amyloid (Abeta) and its interaction with synaptic copper may be pathogenic in Alzheimer disease. Recently, Co(III)-cyclen tagged to an aromatic recognition motif was shown to degrade Abeta in vitro. Here, we report that apocyclen attached to selective Abeta recognition motifs (KLVFF or curcumin) can capture copper bound to Abeta and use the Cu(II) in place of Co(III) to become proteolytically active. The resultant complexes interfere with Abeta aggregation, degrade Abeta into fragments, preventing H2O2 formation and toxicity in neuronal cell culture. Because Abeta binds Cu in amyloid plaques, apocyclen-tagged targeting molecules may be a promising approach to the selective degradation of Abeta in Alzheimer disease. The principle of copper capture could generalize to other amyloidoses where copper is implicated.
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