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Amyloid peptide enhances nail rusting: novel insight into mechanisms of aging and Alzheimer's disease
Authors:Mattson Mark P  Mattson Elliot P
Affiliation:Sanders-Brown Research Center on Aging, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, USA. matstsonm@grc.nia.gov
Abstract:Oxidative stress is believed to play a major role in the dysfunction and degeneration of neurons that occurs in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Amyloid beta-peptide forms insoluble aggregates in the brains of AD patients and it has been shown that the neurotoxic actions of amyloid beta-peptide involve membrane lipid peroxidation. However, it is not known how amyloid beta-peptide induces oxidative stress. Here we describe a simple experiment that we performed 6 years ago that demonstrates that amyloid beta-peptide is itself a source of oxyradicals. The weights of iron nails were recorded and the nails were then incubated in one of three different solutions: water (control), 1mM amyloid beta-peptide (1-40) in water, and 1mM bovine serum albumin in water. After 1 month of incubation the nails were then removed, allowed to dry, and then their weights determined. The weights of all the nails decreased, but the amount of weight decrease in the nails that had been incubated in the presence of amyloid beta-peptide was approximately twice that of the nails incubated in the control solutions. These data provide direct evidence that amyloid beta-peptide generates, or facilitates the production of, oxyradicals thereby enhancing metal oxidation.
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