958 resultados para Amyloid-precursor Protein
Resumo:
The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is a molecule centrally involved in Alzheimer disease pathology, but whose normal function is still poorly understood. To investigate the consequences of increased intracellular production of various regions of APP on cellular physiology, we stably transfected PC12 cells with the C-terminal 100 amino acids of the human APP. In eight transfected clones that express the APP(C100) protein, exposure to nerve growth factor (NGF) did not promote differentiation. Transfectants continued to divide and failed to elaborate extensive neurites, whereas control PC12 cells, mock-transfected PC12 cells, and a nonexpressing transfected cell line did develop neurites and stopped dividing after NGF stimulation. Unlike NGF treatment, treatment with basic fibroblast growth factor profoundly accelerated neurite outgrowth in transfected cells. Also, a dramatic increase in a tyrosine phosphatase activity was noted. Expression and accumulation of APP C100 protein in PC12 cells results in an abnormal response to growth factor stimulation.
Resumo:
As in Alzheimer-disease (AD) brain, vacuolated muscle fibers of inclusion-body myositis (IBM) contain abnormally accumulated beta-amyloid precursor protein (beta APP), including its beta-amyloid protein epitope, and increased beta APP-751 mRNA. Other similarities between IBM muscle and AD brain phenotypes include paired helical filaments, hyperphosphorylated tau protein, apolipoprotein E, and mitochondrial abnormalities, including decreased cytochrome-c oxidase (COX) activity. The pathogenesis of these abnormalities in IBM muscle and AD brain is not known. We now report that direct transfer of the beta APP gene, using adenovirus vector, into cultured normal human muscle fibers causes structural abnormalities of mitochondria and decreased COX activity. In this adenovirus-mediated beta APP gene transfer, we demonstrated that beta APP overproduction can induce mitochondrial abnormalities. The data suggest that excessive beta APP may be responsible for mitochondrial and COX abnormalities in IBM muscle and perhaps AD brain.
Resumo:
Stimulation of muscarinic m1 or m3 receptors can, by generating diacylglycerol and activating protein kinase C, accelerate the breakdown of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) to form soluble, nonamyloidogenic derivatives (APPs), as previously shown. This relationship has been demonstrated in human glioma and neuroblastoma cells, as well as in transfected human embryonic kidney 293 cells and PC-12 cells. We now provide evidence that stimulation of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs), which also are coupled to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate hydrolysis, similarly accelerates processing of APP into nonamyloidogenic APPs. This process is demonstrated both in hippocampal neurons derived from fetal rats and in human embryonic kidney 293 cells transfected with cDNA expression constructs encoding the mGluR 1 alpha subtype. In hippocampal neurons, both an mGluR antagonist, L-(+)-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid, and an inhibitor of protein kinase C, GF 109203X, blocked the APPs release evoked by glutamate receptor stimulation. Ionotropic glutamate agonists, N-methyl-D-aspartate or S(-)-5-fluorowillardiine, failed to affect APPs release. These data show that selective mGluR agonists that initiate signal-transduction events can regulate APP processing in bona fide primary neurons and transfected cells. As glutamatergic neurons in the cortex and hippocampus are damaged in Alzheimer disease, amyloid production in these regions may be enhanced by deficits in glutamatergic neurotransmission.
Resumo:
The beta-amyloid precursor protein (beta-APP), from which the beta-A4 peptide is derived, is considered to be central to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease (AD). Transgenic mice expressing the 751-amino acid isoform of human beta-APP (beta-APP751) have been shown to develop early AD-like histopathology with diffuse deposits of beta-A4 and aberrant tau protein expression in the brain, particularly in the hippocampus, cortex, and amygdala. We now report that beta-APP751 transgenic mice exhibit age-dependent deficits in spatial learning in a water-maze task and in spontaneous alternation in a Y maze. These deficits were mild or absent in 6-month-old transgenic mice but were severe in 12-month-old transgenic mice compared to age-matched wild-type control mice. No other behavioral abnormalities were observed. These mice therefore model the progressive learning and memory impairment that is a cardinal feature of AD. These results provide evidence for a relationship between abnormal expression of beta-APP and cognitive impairments.
Resumo:
Transmembrane proteins play crucial roles in many important physiological processes. The intracellular domain of membrane proteins is key for their function by interacting with a wide variety of cytosolic proteins. It is therefore important to examine this interaction. A recently developed method to study these interactions, based on the use of liposomes as a model membrane, involves the covalent coupling of the cytoplasmic domains of membrane proteins to the liposome membrane. This allows for the analysis of interaction partners requiring both protein and membrane lipid binding. This thesis further establishes the liposome recruitment system and utilises it to examine the intracellular interactome of the amyloid precursor protein (APP), most well-known for its proteolytic cleavage that results in the production and accumulation of amyloid beta fragments, the main constituent of amyloid plaques in Alzheimer’s disease pathology. Despite this, the physiological function of APP remains largely unclear. Through the use of the proteo-liposome recruitment system two novel interactions of APP’s intracellular domain (AICD) are examined with a view to gaining a greater insight into APP’s physiological function. One of these novel interactions is between AICD and the mTOR complex, a serine/threonine protein kinase that integrates signals from nutrients and growth factors. The kinase domain of mTOR directly binds to AICD and the N-terminal amino acids of AICD are crucial for this interaction. The second novel interaction is between AICD and the endosomal PIKfyve complex, a lipid kinase involved in the production of phosphatidylinositol-3,5-bisphosphate (PI(3,5)P2) from phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate, which has a role in controlling ensdosome dynamics. The scaffold protein Vac14 of the PIKfyve complex binds directly to AICD and the C-terminus of AICD is important for its interaction with the PIKfyve complex. Using a recently developed intracellular PI(3,5)P2 probe it is shown that APP controls the formation of PI(3,5)P2 positive vesicular structures and that the PIKfyve complex is involved in the trafficking and degradation of APP. Both of these novel APP interactors have important implications of both APP function and Alzheimer’s disease. The proteo-liposome recruitment method is further validated through its use to examine the recruitment and assembly of the AP-2/clathrin coat from purified components to two membrane proteins containing different sorting motifs. Taken together this thesis highlights the proteo-liposome recruitment system as a valuable tool for the study of membrane proteins intracellular interactome. It allows for the mimicking of the protein in its native configuration therefore identifying weaker interactions that are not detected by more conventional methods and also detecting interactions that are mediated by membrane phospholipids.
Resumo:
While the Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) plays a central role in Alzheimer's disease, its cellular function still remains largely unclear. It was our goal to establish APP function which will provide insights into APP's implication in Alzheimer's disease. Using our recently developed proteo-liposome assay we established the interactome of APP's intracellular domain (known as AICD), thereby identifying novel APP interactors that provide mechanistic insights into APP function. By combining biochemical, cell biological and genetic approaches we validated the functional significance of one of these novel interactors. Here we show that APP binds the PIKfyve complex, an essential kinase for the synthesis of the endosomal phosphoinositide phosphatidylinositol-3,5-bisphosphate. This signalling lipid plays a crucial role in endosomal homeostasis and receptor sorting. Loss of PIKfyve function by mutation causes profound neurodegeneration in mammals. Using C. elegans genetics we demonstrate that APP functionally cooperates with PIKfyve in vivo. This regulation is required for maintaining endosomal and neuronal function. Our findings establish an unexpected role for APP in the regulation of endosomal phosphoinositide metabolism with dramatic consequences for endosomal biology and important implications for our understanding of Alzheimer's disease.
Resumo:
Models of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) have provided useful insights into the pathogenesis and mechanistic pathways that lead to its development. One emerging idea about AD is that it may be described as a hypometabolic disorder due to the reduction of glucose uptake in AD brains. Inappropriate processing of Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) is considered central to the initiation and progression of the disease. Although the exact role of APP misprocessing is unclear, it may play a role in neuronal metabolism before the onset of neurodegeneration. To investigate the potential role of APP in neuronal metabolism, the SHSY5Y neuroblastoma cell line was used to generate cell lines that stably overexpress wild type APP695 or express Swedish mutated-APP observed in familial AD (FAD), both under the control of the neuronal promoter, Synapsin I. The effects of APP on glucose uptake, cellular stress and energy homeostasis were studied extensively. It was found that APP-overexpressing cells exhibited decreased glucose uptake with changes in basal oxygen consumption in comparison to control cell lines. Similar studies were also performed in fibroblasts taken from FAD patients compared with control fibroblasts. Previous studies found FAD-derived fibroblasts displayed altered metabolic profiles, calcium homeostasis and oxidative stress when compared to controls. As such, in this study fibroblasts were studied in terms of their ability to metabolise glucose and their mitochondrial function. Results show that FAD-derived fibroblasts demonstrate no differences in mitochondrial function, or response to oxidative stress compared to control fibroblasts. However, control fibroblasts treated with Aβ1-42 demonstrated changes in glucose uptake. This study highlights the importance of APP expression within non-neuronal cell lines, suggesting that whilst AD is considered a brain-associated disorder, peripheral effects in non-neuronal cell types should also be considered when studying the effects of Aβ on metabolism.
Resumo:
Phosphoinositides are important components of eukaryotic membranes that are required for multiple forms of membrane dynamics. Phosphoinositides are involved in defining membrane identity, mediate cell signalling and control membrane trafficking events. Due to their pivotal role in membrane dynamics, phosphoinositide de-regulation contributes to various human diseases. In this review, we will focus on the newly emerging regulation of the PIKfyve complex, a phosphoinositide kinase that converts the endosomal phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate [PI(3)P] to phosphatidylinositol-3,5-bisphosphate [PI(3,5)P2)], a low abundance phosphoinositide of outstanding importance for neuronal integrity and function. Loss of PIKfyve function is well known to result in neurodegeneration in both mousemodels and human patients. Our recent work has surprisingly identified the amyloid precursor protein (APP), the central molecule in Alzheimer s disease aetiology, as a novel interaction partner of a subunit of the PIKfyve complex, Vac14. Furthermore, it has been shown that APP modulates PIKfyve function and PI(3,5)P2 dynamics, suggesting that the APP gene family functions as regulator of PI(3,5)P2 metabolism. The recent advances discussed in this review suggest a novel, unexpected, â-amyloid-independent mechanism for neurodegeneration in Alzheimer s disease.
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Despite existing knowledge about the role of the A Disintegrin and Metalloproteinase 10 (ADAM10) as the α-secretase involved in the non-amyloidogenic processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and Notch signalling we have only limited information about its regulation. In this study, we have identified ADAM10 interactors using a split ubiquitin yeast two hybrid approach. Tetraspanin 3 (Tspan3), which is highly expressed in the murine brain and elevated in brains of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, was identified and confirmed to bind ADAM10 by co-immunoprecipitation experiments in mammalian cells in complex with APP and the γ-secretase protease presenilin. Tspan3 expression increased the cell surface levels of its interacting partners and was mainly localized in early and late endosomes. In contrast to the previously described ADAM10-binding tetraspanins, Tspan3 did not affect the endoplasmic reticulum to plasma membrane transport of ADAM10. Heterologous Tspan3 expression significantly increased the appearance of carboxy-terminal cleavage products of ADAM10 and APP, whereas N-cadherin ectodomain shedding appeared unaffected. Inhibiting the endocytosis of Tspan3 by mutating a critical cytoplasmic tyrosine-based internalization motif led to increased surface expression of APP and ADAM10. After its downregulation in neuroblastoma cells and in brains of Tspan3-deficient mice, ADAM10 and APP levels appeared unaltered possibly due to a compensatory increase in the expression of Tspans 5 and 7, respectively. In conclusion, our data suggest that Tspan3 acts in concert with other tetraspanins as a stabilizing factor of active ADAM10, APP and the γ-secretase complex at the plasma membrane and within the endocytic pathway.
Resumo:
The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is mainly known for being the precursor of the ß-amyloid peptide, which accumulates in plaques found in the brain of Alzheimer's disease patients. Expression in different tissues and the degree of sequence identity among mammals indicate an essential and non-tissue specific physiological function. APP is anchored to the membrane and displays a single C-terminal intracellular domain and a longer N-terminal extracellular domain. The basic biochemical properties and the scattered data on research, not related to production of beta-amyloid peptide, suggest that the protein and the molecules resulting from APP proteolytic cleavage may act as adhesion factors, enzymes, hormones/neurotransmitters and/or protease inhibitors. APP deserves to be known for its quite notable properties and its physiological role(s).
Resumo:
Die Alzheimer Krankheit ist eine fortschreitendende Demenzerkrankung von der in Deutschland ca. 1,6 Millionen Menschen betroffen sind. Im Gehirn der Patienten finden sich sogenannte amyloide Plaques, deren Hauptbestandteil das Aβ-Protein ist. Dieses Peptid ist ein Spaltprodukt des APP-Proteins (engl. amyloid precursor protein). APP ist das namensgebende Mitglied der APP-Proteinfamilie zu der neben APP die beiden APP-Homologen APLP1 und APLP2 (engl. amyloid precursor like protein) gehören. Obwohl inzwischen über die pathologische Rolle dieser Proteinfamilie bei der Alzheimer Krankheit vieles bekannt ist, bleiben die physiologischen Funktionen dieser Proteine bisher größtenteils ungeklärt. Die vorliegende Arbeit beschreibt erstmals einen APLP1-spezifischen Effekt auf die Ausbildung von Filopodien. Sowohl das humane als auch das murine APLP1 induzierten nach transienter Überexpression die Bildung zahlreicher filopodialer Fortsätze auf der Membran von PC12-Zellen. Vergleichbare Resultate konnten mit beiden APLP1-Proteinen auch auf der Membran von embryonalen (E18.5), cortikalen Neuronen der Ratte gezeigt werden. Dass APLP1 einen derartigen Effekt auf Neuronen und PC12-Zellen zeigt, begründet die Annahme, dass APLP1 in vivo eine Funktion bei der Entwicklung und Differenzierung von Neuronen übernimmt. Anhand von Versuchen mit deletierten APLP1-Proteinen und APLP1/APLP2-Chimärproteinen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die von Exon 5 und Exon 6 codierten Bereiche des APLP1 für die Induktion der Filopodien essentiell sind. Unter Einbeziehung von in ihrer räumlichen Struktur bereits bekannten Domänen und aufgrund von Homologievergleichen der primären Aminosäuresequenz dieser Region mit entsprechenden Bereichen der APP- bzw. APLP2-Proteine wurde die wahrscheinliche Lage der Filopodien-induzierenden Domäne innerhalb des von Exon 6 codierten Bereiches diskutiert. Es konnte ferner gezeigt werden, dass die untersuchte Induktion von Filopodien durch die sogenannte α-Sekretierung moduliert werden kann. Unter den gewählten Versuchsbedingungen war nur membranständiges APLP1, nicht aber sekretiertes APLP1 in der Lage, Filopodien zu induzieren. Abschliessend wurden Ergebnisse gezeigt, die erste Einblicke in Signalkaskaden erlauben, die von APLP1 angesteuert werden und so die Enstehung der Filopodien auslösen. Bezüglich des primären Prozesses der Signalkaskade, der Bindung von APLP1 an einen bisher unbekannten Rezeptor, wurde die Möglichkeit diskutiert, ob APP oder APLP2 oder sogar APLP1 selbst als Rezeptor fungieren könnten. Die beobachteten Prozesse nach Überexpression von APLP1 entsprechen vermutlich einer physiologischen Funktion bei der Differenzierung von Neuronen, die mit der Interaktion einer extrazellulär gelegenen Domäne mit einem Rezeptor beginnt, die Aktivierung einer Signalkaskade zur Akrinreorganisation zu Folge hat und die Entstehung filopodialer Strukturen auslöst.
Resumo:
Das Amyloid-Vorläufer-Protein (APP) spielt eine zentrale Rolle in der Entstehung und Entwicklung von Morbus Alzheimer. Hierbei ist die proteolytische Prozessierung von APP von entscheidender Bedeutung. Das Verhältnis von neurotoxischen und neuroprotektiven Spaltprodukten, die über den amyloidogenen und nicht-amyloidogenen Weg der APP-Prozessierung gebildeten werden, ist für das Überleben von Neuronen und deren Resistenz gegen zytotoxische Stress-Stimuli von hoher Relevanz. Störungen der Calcium-Homöostase sind ein bekanntes Phänomen bei Morbus Alzheimer. Im ersten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Rolle von überexprimiertem APP in der Regulation des neuronalen Zelltods nach Calcium Freisetzung untersucht. Die Calcium Freisetzung aus dem endoplasmatischen Retikulum wurde durch die Inhibition der sarko- und endoplasmatischen Calcium-ATPasen (SERCA) ausgelöst. Dies führt zur Induktion der sogenannten „unfolded protein response“ (UPR) und zu einer Aktivierung von Effektor-Caspasen. Für APP-überexprimierende PC12 Zellen konnte bereits zuvor eine im Vergleich zur Kontrolle nach der durch Calcium Freisetzung-induzierten Apoptose eine erhöhte intrazelluläre Calcium Konzentration nachgewiesen werden. Über die Messung der Aktivierung von Effektor-Caspasen konnte zudem ein gesteigerter Zelltod in den APP-überexprimierenden Zellen gemessen werden. Zudem konnte gezeigt werden, dass der pro-apoptotische Transkriptionsfaktor CHOP, nicht aber die klassischen UPR-Zielgene spezifisch hochreguliert wurden. Die APP-modulierte gesteigerte Induktion von Apoptose nach Calcium Freisezung konnte durch Komplexierung der intrazellulären Calcium Ionen und durch Knockdown von CHOP im Vergleich zur Kontrolle gänzlich unterdrückt werden. Ferner bewirkte die Inhibition der Speicher-aktivierten Calcium-Kanälen (SOCC) eine signifikante Unterdrückung der beobachteten erhöhten intrazellulären Calcium Konzentration und der gesteigerten Apoptose in den APP-überexprimierenden PC12 Zellen. In diesem Teil der Arbeit konnte eindeutig gezeigt werden, dass APP in der Lage ist den durch Calcium-Freisetzung-induzierten Zelltod zu potenzieren. Diese Modulation durch APP verläuft in einer UPR-unabhängigen Reaktion über die Aktivierung von SOCC’s, einer erhöhten Aufnahme von extrazellulärem Calcium und durch erhöhte Induktion des pro-apoptotischen Transkriptionsfaktors CHOP. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde die sAPPα-vermittelte Neuroprotektion untersucht. Dabei handelt es sich um die N-terminale Ektodomäne von APP, die über die Aktivität der α-Sekretase prozessiert wird und anschließend extrazellulär abgegeben wird. Ziel dieser Versuchsreihe war die neuroprotektive physiologische Funktion von APP im Hinblick auf den Schutz von neuronalen Zellen vor diversen für Morbus Alzheimer relevanten Stress-Stimuli bzw. Apoptose-Stimuli zu untersuchen. Durch die Analyse der Effektor-Caspasen konnte gezeigt werden, dass sAPPα in der Lage ist PC12 Zellen potent vor oxidativem Stress, DNA-Schäden, Hypoxie, proteasomalem Stress und Calcium-Freisetzung zu schützen. Außerdem konnte gezeigt werden, dass sAPPα in der Lage ist den pro-apoptotischen Stress-induzierten JNK/Akt-Signalweg zu inhibieren. Eine Beteiligung des anti-apoptotischen PI3K/Akt-Signalwegs bei der sAPPα-vermittelten Protektion konnte über die Inhibition der PI3-Kinase ebenfalls demonstriert werden, die eine Aufhebung der sAPPα-vermittelten Neuroprotektion bewirkte. Diese Daten zeigen neue molekulare Mechanismen auf, die dem sAPPα-vermittelten Schutz vor pathophysiologisch relevanten Stress-Stimuli in neuronalen Zellen zugrunde liegen. Im letzten Teil der Arbeit wurden verschieden Gruppen von pharmakologischen Substanzen im Hinblick auf ihre neuroprotektive Wirkung untersucht und mit ihren Effekten auf den APP-Metabolismus korreliert. Die Untersuchungen ergaben, dass Galantamin, ein schwacher Acetycholinesterase Inhibitor und allosterisch potenzierender Ligand von nikotinischen Acetylcholin-Rezeptoren in der Lage war, naive, und mit noch höherer Effizienz APP-überexprimierende Zelllinien vor dem Stress-induzierten Zelltod zu schützen. Zudem bewirkte Galantamin in APP-überexprimierenden HEK293 Zellen eine rasche Erhöhung der sAPPα Sekretion, so dass hier von einer Rezeptor-vermittelten Modulation des APP Metabolismus ausgegangen werden kann. Omega-3 Fettsäuren wirken sich positiv auf die Membranfluidität von Zellen aus und es konnte bereits gezeigt werden, dass die Bildung des toxischen Aβ Peptids hierdurch vermindert wird. In Analogie zu Galantamin schützte die Omega-3 Fettsäure Docosahexaensäure (DHA) neuronale Zellen vor dem Stress-induzierten Zelltod, wobei der Schutz in APP-überexprimierenden Zellen besonders effizient war. Diese Daten legen nahe, dass die Aktivierung des antiamyloidogenen Wegs der APP-Prozessierung ein viel versprechender Ansatz für die Entwicklung neuer Therapien gegen Morbus Alzheimer sein könnte.
Resumo:
The hallmark of Alzheimer's disease is the cerebral deposition of amyloid which is derived from the amyloid precursor protein (APP). The function of APP is unknown but there is increasing evidence for the role of APP in cell-cell and/or cell-matrix interactions. Primary cultures of murine neurons were treated with antisense oligonucleotides to down-regulate APP. This paper presents evidence that APP mediates a substrate-specific interaction between neurons and extracellular matrix components collagen type I, laminin and heparan sulphate proteoglycan but not fibronectin or poly-L-lysine. It remains to be determined whether this effect is the direct result of APP-matrix interactions, or whether an intermediary pathway is involved. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.
Resumo:
In this report, we confirm our previous findings of increased concentrations of soluble amyloid-β protein precursor (sAβPP) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in a large cohort of patients (n = 314), not overlapping with those of our previous study, and we extend our observations by including a control group of participants with normal cognition. In addition, we investigate the effects of age, the APOEε4 genotype, and the blood-CSF barrier function on the concentrations of sAβPPα and sAβPPβ. The study participants were categorized according to clinical-neuropsychological criteria, supported by CSF neurochemical dementia diagnostics (NDD) analyses. sAβPPα concentrations in the AD group (132.0 ± 44.8) were significantly higher than in the control group (105.3 ± 37.3, p < 0.0005) but did not differ from the MCI-AD group (138.5 ± 39.5, p = 0.91). The MCI-AD group differed significantly from the MCI-O (97.3 ± 34.3, p < 0.05) group. There was no difference between the control and the MCI-O groups (p = 0.94). Similarly, sAβPPβ concentrations in the AD group (160.2 ± 54.3) were significantly higher than in the control group (129.9 ± 44.6, p < 0.005) but did not differ from the MCI-AD group (184.0 ± 56.4, p = 0.20). The MCI-AD group differed significantly from the MCI-O (127.8 ± 46.2, p < 0.05) group. There was no difference between the control and the MCI-O groups (p > 0.99). We observed highly significant correlation of the two sAβPP forms. Age and the CSF-serum albumin ratio were significant albeit weak predictors of the sAβPPα and sAβPPβ concentrations, while carrying the APOEε4 allele did not influenced the levels of the sAβPP forms. Taken together, the results strongly suggest that CSF sAβPP concentrations may be considered as an extension of already available NDD tools.
Resumo:
NACP, a 140-amino acid presynaptic protein, is the precursor of NAC [the non-amyloid beta/A4 protein (A beta) component of Alzheimer disease (AD) amyloid], a peptide isolated from and immunologically localized to brain amyloid of patients afflicted with AD. NACP produced in Escherichia coli bound to A beta peptides, the major component of AD amyloid. NACP bound to A beta 1-38 and A beta 25-35 immobilized on nitrocellulose but did not bind to A beta 1-28 on the filter under the same conditions. NACP binding to A beta 1-38 was abolished by addition of A beta 25-35 but not by A beta 1-28, suggesting that the hydrophobic region of the A beta peptide is critical to this binding. NACP-112, a shorter splice variant of NACP containing the NAC sequence, bound to A beta, but NACP delta, a deletion mutant of NACP lacking the NAC domain, did not bind A beta 1-38. Furthermore, binding between NACP-112 and A beta 1-38 was decreased by addition of peptide Y, a peptide that covers the last 15 residues of NAC. In an aqueous solution, A beta 1-38 aggregation was observed when NACP was also present in an incubation mixture at a ratio of 1:125 (NACP/A beta), whereas A beta 1-38 alone or NACP alone did not aggregate under the same conditions, suggesting that the formation of a complex between A beta and NACP may promote aggregation of A beta. Thus, NACP can bind A beta peptides through the specific sequence and can promote A beta aggregation, raising the possibility that NACP may play a role in the development of AD amyloid.