Amyloid beta

Amyloid beta ( or Abeta) denotes peptides of 36–43 amino acids that are the main component of the amyloid plaques found in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease. The peptides derive from the amyloid-beta precursor protein (APP), which is cleaved by beta secretase and gamma secretase to yield Aβ in a cholesterol-dependent process and substrate presentation. Aβ molecules can aggregate to form flexible soluble oligomers which may exist in several forms. It is now believed that certain misfolded oligomers (known as "seeds") can induce other Aβ molecules to also take the misfolded oligomeric form, leading to a chain reaction akin to a prion infection. The oligomers are toxic to nerve cells. The other protein implicated in Alzheimer's disease, tau protein, also forms such prion-like misfolded oligomers, and there is some evidence that misfolded Aβ can induce tau to misfold.

Amyloid beta peptide (beta-APP)
A partially folded structure of amyloid beta(1 40) in an aqueous environment (pdb 2lfm)
Identifiers
SymbolAPP
PfamPF03494
InterProIPR013803
SCOP22lfm / SCOPe / SUPFAM
TCDB1.C.50
OPM superfamily304
OPM protein2y3k
Membranome45
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary
amyloid beta (A4) precursor protein (peptidase nexin-II, Alzheimer disease)
Processing of the amyloid precursor protein
Identifiers
SymbolAPP
Alt. symbolsAD1
NCBI gene351
HGNC620
OMIM104760
RefSeqNM_000484
UniProtP05067
Other data
LocusChr. 21 q21.2
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

A study has suggested that APP and its amyloid potential is of ancient origins, dating as far back as early deuterostomes.

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