The transition metal ion copper(II) has a critical role in chronic neurologic diseases. The amyloid precursor protein (APP) of Alzheimer's disease or a synthetic peptide representing its copper-binding site reduced bound copper(II) to copper(I). This copper ion-mediated redox reaction led to disulfide bond formation in APP, which indicated that free sulfhydryl groups of APP were involved. Neither superoxide nor hydrogen peroxide had an effect on the kinetics of copper(II) reduction. The reduction of copper(II) to copper(I) by APP involves an electron-transfer reaction and could enhance the production of hydroxyl radicals, which could then attack nearby sites. Thus, copper-mediated toxicity may contribute to neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's disease.
The extracellular domain of transmembrane Abeta amyloid precursor protein (APP) has a Cu(II) reducing activity upon Cu(II) binding associated with the formation of a new disulfide bridge. The complete assignment of the disulfide bond revealed the involvement of cysteines 144 and 158 around copper-binding histidine residues. The vulnerability of APP-Cu(I) complexes to reactive oxygen species was elaborated as a site-specific and random fragmentation of APP in a time-dependent manner and at low concentrations of H2O2. Analysis of the specific reaction revealed the generation of C-terminal polypeptides, containing the Abeta domain. APP catalyzed the reduction of H2O2 and oxidation of Cu(I) to Cu(II) in a "peroxidative" reaction in vitro. The resulting bound copper-hydroxyl radical intermediate [APP-Cu(II)(.OH)] then likely participated in a Fenton type of reaction with radical formation as a prerequisite for protein degradation. Evidence from two observations suggests that the reaction takes place in two phases. Bathocuproine, a trapping agent for Cu(I), abolished the initial fragmentation, and chelation of Cu(II) by DTPA (diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid) interrupted the reaction cascade induced by H2O2 at later stages. Consequently, the results suggest that a cytotoxic gain-of-function of APP-Cu(I) complexes might result in a perturbation of free radical homeostasis. What significance such a perturbation may have for the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease remains to be determined.
Background: Formation of inhibitory synapses in the CNS is dependent on cluster formation of the scaffold protein gephyrin. Results: Knockdown of collybistin and inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK1,-2, and -5) abolished the phosphorylation of gephyrin detected by mAb7a at Ser-270. Conclusion: Gephyrin detected with mAb7a is phosphorylated at Ser-270. Significance: These data suggest a novel view on kinases involved in gephyrin phosphorylation.
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