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Fill a glass injection capillary with a solution of synthetic monomeric amyloid peptides, which are abnormal peptides with aggregation-prone properties.
Insert the capillary into a microinjection holder.
Simultaneously place a zebrafish in a petri dish containing an anesthetic solution.
Once the fish is anesthetized, hold it laterally with forceps to secure the head.
Make a small incision in the fish skull at the junction of the two lateral plates to access the neuron-rich forebrain.
Now, insert the capillary needle through the incision, and inject the amyloid peptide solution into the forebrain.
Transfer the zebrafish to a recovery container with circulating water.
Inside the forebrain, the amyloid peptides accumulate near the neurons.
These peptides spontaneously misfold to form beta-sheets and aggregate around the neurons to form toxic amyloid plaques.
These plaques damage the neurons and impair their signal transmission.
This establishes a zebrafish model of Alzheimer's disease, a brain disorder characterized by amyloid plaques.
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