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The effects of amyloid precursor protein C-105 expression and ganglioside GM1 on PC12 cell vulnerability to the calcium ionophore A23 187 and hydrogen peroxide

Specific mutations in the gene for the beta amyloid precursor protein (APP) cause
Alzheimer's disease (AD). A key neuropathological hallmark of AD is extracellular
neuritic plaques. The core component of plaques is AB, a 39-43 amino acid peptide
derived from APP. APP C-100 and APP C-105 are C-terminal fragments of APP, 100
and 105 amino acids long, respectively. APP C-100 is a normal metabolite of APP. AI3 is
located at the N-terminus of the APP C-100 sequence.
To determine whether APP C-105 expression alters cellular vulnerability to calcium
and hydrogen peroxide, rat PC12 cells were modified to overexpress APP C-105.
Permanent transfectants (clones) were selected, then characterized by standard molecular
biological techniques. DNA and mRNA corresponding to APP C-105 were detected in
APP C-105 transfectants, but not in wild type controls. Aggregated APP C-105 was
detected in cell lysates and conditioned media from APP C-105 transfectants, but was
absent or detected at lower concentrations in vector-transfected and wild type controls.
Cell survival as a function of concentration was determined for A23 l 87, a Ca^2+
ionophore, and hydrogen peroxide in APP C-105 transfectants and vector-transfected
controls. Cells were exposed to A23 l 87 or hydrogen peroxide for 24 hours in RP:MI
media containing 3 μM insulin, and survival was quantitated using the tetrazolium dye,
MTT. APP C-105 expression significantly increased PC 12 cell vulnerability to A23 l 87,
and significantly decreased vulnerability to hydrogen peroxide.
Other experiments were performed with GM 1 ganglioside, which is known to protect
cells against numerous insults. When wild type PC 12 cells or APP C-10 5 transfectants
were exposed to a toxin and GMl concurrently for 24 hours, GMl produced
concentration-dependent inhibition of A23 l 87 toxicity in wild type PC 12 cells but was
ineffective against hydrogen peroxide in both wild type PC12 and APP C-105-transfected
clones.
The current study has demonstrated that expression of APP C-105 protects
PC 12 cells against hydrogen peroxide, but exacerbates the effect of calcium influx.
In conjunction with other reports, this study indicates that APP C-105 is an
important regulator of cellular homeostasis. Therefore, the pattern of APP
processing may alter vulnerability to neurotoxic insults.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/49072
Date January 1997
CreatorsO'Malley, Catherine McKeon
PublisherBoston University
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation
RightsThis work is being made available in OpenBU by permission of its author, and is available for research purposes only. All rights are reserved to the author.

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