Abstract

Not only are β-amyloid peptides and senile plaque deposits characteristics in Alzheimer’s disease but there is growing evidence to suggest that oxidative stress also plays a role with a decrease in levels of brain superoxide dismutase (SOD), an enzyme that catalyses the dismutation of superoxide radicals into molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. We show through kinetic and fluorescence analysis that β-amyloid peptides, in the glycine zipper region [Aβ29–33 and Aβ25–37] of Aβ1–40 interact with, and inhibit, SOD directly. The enzyme was purified 15.7-fold from bovine brain by DEAE-Sepharose ion exchange chromatography in a yield of 68.8% and specific activity of 3.66 U.mg−1. The subunit structure of the enzyme was monomeric with a molecular mass of 13 kDa, as estimated by SDS-PAGE. Inhibitor constants (Ki) and dissociation constants (Kd) were calculated as 14.44, 13.16 and 11.72 µM and 9.38, 15.7 and 12.13 for Aβ25–37, Aβ29–33 and Aβ1–40, respectively; the number of binding sites on the enzyme for the peptides was 1.

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