ABSTRACT
A chemical, structural and biological study on the beta-amyloid peptide beta12-28 is reported which was carried out in order to assess the feasibility using this peptide fragment as a model of the natural beta-amyloid protein. The aggregation properties of beta12-28 have been investigated by pulse field-gradient NMR spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The results obtained suggest that beta12-28 behaviour is comparable to that of the natural beta-amyloid protein although kinetically slower. Translational diffusion coefficients obtained by NMR on an aged beta12-28 solution suggest that the soluble peptide fraction is composed of oligomeric intermediates adopting an extended ellipsoidal assembly rather than a spherical one. The beta12-28 peptide proved to be cytotoxic in PC12 cell cultures as monitored by the MTT assay, although a lack of reproducibility was observed in the dose-response experiments.