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Portrait of Sara Snogerup Linse

Sara Linse

Professor

Portrait of Sara Snogerup Linse

A beta dimers differ from monomers in structural propensity, aggregation paths and population of synaptotoxic assemblies

Author

  • Tiernan T. O'Malley
  • Nur Alia Oktaviani
  • Dainan Zhang
  • Aleksey Lomakin
  • Brian O'Nuallain
  • Sara Linse
  • George B. Benedek
  • Michael J. Rowan
  • Frans A. A. Mulder
  • Dominic M. Walsh

Summary, in English

Dimers of A beta (amyloid beta-protein) are believed to play an important role in Alzheimer's disease. In the absence of sufficient brain-derived dimers, we studied one of the only possible dimers that could be produced in vivo, [A beta](DiY) (dityrosine cross-linked A beta). For comparison, we used the A beta monomer and a design dimer cross-linked by replacement of Ser(26) with cystine [A beta S26C](2). We showed that similar to monomers, unaggregated dimers lack appreciable structure and fail to alter long-term potentiation. Importantly, dimers exhibit subtly different structural propensities from monomers and each other, and can self-associate to form larger assemblies. Although [A beta](DiY) and [A beta S26C](2) have distinct aggregation pathways, they both populate bioactive soluble assemblies for longer durations than A beta monomers. Our results indicate that the link between A beta dimers and Alzheimer's disease results from the ability of dimers to further assemble and form synaptotoxic assemblies that persist for long periods of time.

Department/s

  • Biochemistry and Structural Biology
  • MultiPark: Multidisciplinary research focused on Parkinson´s disease

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Pages

413-426

Publication/Series

Biochemical Journal

Volume

461

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Portland Press

Topic

  • Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Keywords

  • Alzheimer's disease
  • amyloid beta-protein
  • long-term potentiation
  • nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
  • synaptic plasticity

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0264-6021