Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

The Serpin-Enzyme Complex Receptor Recognizes Soluble, Nontoxic Amyloid-β Peptide but Not Aggregated, Cytotoxic Amyloid-β Peptide

89

Citations

26

References

1996

Year

Abstract

There is now extensive evidence that amyloid-beta peptide is toxic to neurons and that its cytotoxic effects can be attributed to a domain corresponding to amyloid-beta 25-35, GSNKGAIIGLM. We have shown recently that the serine proteinase inhibitor (serpin)-enzyme complex receptor (SEC-R), a receptor initially identified for binding of alpha1-antitrypsin (alpha1-AT) and other serine protease inhibitors, also recognizes the amyloid-beta 25-35 domain. In fact, by recognizing the amyloid-beta 25-35 domain, SEC-R mediates cell surface binding, internalization, and degradation of soluble amyloid-beta peptide. In this study, we examined the possibility that SEC-R mediates the neurotoxic effect of amyloid-beta peptide. A series of peptides based on the sequences of amyloid-beta peptide and alpha1-AT was prepared soluble in dimethyl sulfoxide or insoluble in water and examined in assays for SEC-R binding, for cytotoxicity in neuronal PC12 cells and murine cortical neurons in primary culture, and for aggregation in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis. The results show that amyloid-beta peptide 25-35 and amyloid-beta peptide 1-40 prepared soluble in dimethyl sulfoxide compete for binding to SEC-R, are nontoxic, and migrate as monomers in SDS-PAGE analysis. In contrast, the same peptides aged in water did not compete for binding to SEC-R but were toxic and migrated as aggregates in SDS-PAGE. An all-D-amyloid-beta 25-35 peptide was not recognized at all by SEC-R but retained full toxic/aggregating properties. Using a series of deleted, substituted, and chimeric ambeta/alpha1-AT peptides, toxicity correlated well with aggregation but poorly with SEC-R recognition. In a subclone of PC12 cells which developed resistance to the toxic effect of aggregated amyloid-beta 25-35 there was a 2.5-3-fold increase in the number of SEC-R molecules/cell compared with the parent PC12 cell line. These data show that SEC-R does not mediate the cytotoxic effect of aggregated amyloid-beta peptide. Rather, SEC-R could play a protective role by mediating clearance and catabolism of soluble, monomeric amyloid-beta peptide, if soluble amyloid-beta peptide proves to be an in vivo precursor of the insoluble, toxic peptide.

References

YearCitations

1993

9.3K

1993

4.3K

1990

3.8K

1989

3.5K

1994

2.1K

1990

2K

1994

1.5K

1993

1.5K

1993

1.4K

1994

1.3K

Page 1