Identification, transmembrane orientation and biogenesis of the amyloid A4 precursor of Alzheimer's disease.

Article Details

Citation

Dyrks T, Weidemann A, Multhaup G, Salbaum JM, Lemaire HG, Kang J, Muller-Hill B, Masters CL, Beyreuther K

Identification, transmembrane orientation and biogenesis of the amyloid A4 precursor of Alzheimer's disease.

EMBO J. 1988 Apr;7(4):949-57.

PubMed ID
2900137 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The precursor of the Alzheimer's disease-specific amyloid A4 protein is an integral, glycosylated membrane protein which spans the bilayer once. The carboxy-terminal domain of 47 residues was located at the cytoplasmic site of the membrane. The three domains following the transient signal sequence of 17 residues face the opposite side of the membrane. The C-terminal 100 residues of the precursor comprising the amyloid A4 part and the cytoplasmic domain have a high tendency to aggregate, and proteinase K treatment results in peptides of the size of amyloid A4. This finding suggests that there is a precursor-product relationship between precursor and amyloid A4 and we conclude that besides proteolytic cleavage other events such as post-translational modification and membrane injury are primary events that precede the release of the small aggregating amyloid A4 subunit.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Amyloid beta A4 proteinP05067Details