Abstract

The Cu2+ complexes of the 1-16 and the 1-20 fragments of the Alzheimer's disease-related beta-amyloid peptide (CuAbeta) show significant oxidative activities toward a catechol-like substrate trihydroxylbenzene and plasmid DNA cleavage. The latter reflects possible oxidative stress to biological macromolecules, yielding supporting data to the pathological role of these soluble Abeta fragments. The former exhibits enzyme-like kinetics and is dependent on [H2O2], exhibiting k(cat) of 0.066 s-1 (6000-fold higher than the reaction without CuAbeta) and k(cat)/Km of 37.2 m-1s-1 under saturating [H2O2] of approximately 0.24%. This kinetic profile is consistent with metal-centered redox chemistry for the action of CuAbeta. A mechanism is proposed by the use of the catalytic cycle of dinuclear catechol oxidase as a working model. Trihydroxylbenzene is also oxidized by CuAbeta aerobically without H2O2, affording rate constants of 6.50x10(-3) s-1 and 3.25 m-1s-1. This activity is also consistent with catechol oxidase action in the absence of H2O2, wherein the substrate binds and reduces the Cu2+ center first, followed by O2 binding to afford the mu-eta2:eta2-peroxo intermediate, which oxidizes a second substrate to complete the catalytic cycle. A tetragonally distorted octahedral metal coordination sphere with three coordinated His side chains and some specific H-bonding interactions is concluded from the electronic spectrum of CuAbeta, hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR spectrum of CoAbeta, and molecular mechanics calculations. The results presented here are expected to add further insight into the chemistry of metallo-Abeta, which may assist better understanding of the neuropathology of Alzheimer's disease.

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