Author:
Tinker-Mill Claire Louisa
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference29 articles.
1. Mayes, J., et al. (2014). beta-amyloid fibrils in alzheimer disease are not inert when bound to copper ions but can degrade hydrogen peroxide and generate reactive oxygen species. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 289, 12052–12062.
2. Levine, H. (1993). Thioflavine-T interaction with synthetic alzheimers-disease beta-amyloid peptides—detection of amyloid aggregation in solution. Protein Science, 2, 404–410.
3. Zhu, M., Souillac, P. O., Ionescu-Zanetti, C., Carter, S. A., & Fink, A. L. (2002). Surface-catalyzed amyloid fibril formation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277, 50914–50922.
4. Gosal, W. S., Myers, S. L., Radford, S. E., & Thomson, N. H. (2006). Amyloid under the atomic force microscope. Protein and Peptide Letters, 13, 261–270.
5. Arimon, M., et al. (2005). Fine structure study of A beta(1–42) fibrillogenesis with atomic force microscopy. Faseb Journal, 19, 1344.