“…While Aβ peptides truncated at various N-terminal residues have been detected in brain tissue and cerebrospinal fluid samples of AD patients [6,40], subsequent studies have largely confirmed that Aβ4-42 and peptides with a pyroglutamate modification at position 3 (AβpE3-42) are particularly abundant [45,50,51,58,59,68]. Recently, two studies reported novel Aβ4-x-specific antibodies and the consistent finding that in the brains of AD patients and mouse models Aβ4-x peptides were largely confined to amyloid plaque cores, which are composed of the most insoluble, fibrillar Aβ peptides in β-sheet conformation [11,79]. In accordance, biophysical studies have demonstrated that Aβ4-x peptides rapidly assembled into soluble oligomers and fibrillar, high-molecular-weight aggregates [7,11,56].…”