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Not Oligomers but Amyloids are Cytotoxic in the Membrane-Mediated Amyloidogenesis of Amyloid-β Peptides.

Naoya ItohEri TakadaKaori OkuboYoshiaki YanoMasaru HoshinoAkira SasakiMasataka KinjoKatsumi Matsuzaki
Published in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2018)
The formation of neurotoxic aggregates by amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) is considered to be a key step in the onset of Alzheimer's disease. It is widely accepted that oligomers are more neurotoxic than amyloid fibrils in the aqueous-phase aggregation of Aβ. Membrane-mediated amyloidogenesis is also relevant to the pathology, although the relationship between the aggregate size and cytotoxicity has remained elusive. Here, aggregation processes of Aβ on living cells and cytotoxic events were monitored by fluorescence techniques. Aβ formed amyloids after forming oligomers composed of ≈10 Aβ molecules. The formation of amyloids was necessary to activate apoptotic caspase-3 and reduce the ability of the cell to proliferate; this indicated that amyloid formation is a key event in Aβ-induced cytotoxicity.
Keyphrases
  • living cells
  • cell death
  • fluorescent probe
  • single molecule
  • single cell
  • drug induced
  • bone marrow
  • induced apoptosis
  • amino acid