Alzheimer's disease: insolubility of partially purified paired helical filaments in sodium dodecyl sulfate and urea.
A method is described for the partial purification of the paired helical filaments that accumulate progressively in human neurons in Alzheimer's disease (senile dementia). Paired helical filaments have unusual solubility characteristics, including insolubility in sodium dodecyl sulfate, urea, reducing agent, and guanidine, which prevent analysis of their molecular composition by gel electrophoresis. The paired helical filaments appear to contain covalent bonds other than disulfide, which cross-link individual filaments into a rigid intracellular polymer. Thus, paired helical filaments appear to represent an example in neurons of an insoluble cross-linked protein. Covalently cross-linked protein polymers occur in lens senile cataracts and in terminally differentiated skin keratinocytes, suggesting that there may be a common mechanism for remodeling some structural proteins during cell aging.[1]References
- Alzheimer's disease: insolubility of partially purified paired helical filaments in sodium dodecyl sulfate and urea. Selkoe, D.J., Ihara, Y., Salazar, F.J. Science (1982) [Pubmed]
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