Converging pathways of chromogranin and amyloid metabolism in the brain

大脑中嗜铬粒蛋白和淀粉样蛋白代谢的汇聚途径

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作者:Niklas Mattsson, Per Johansson, Oskar Hansson, Anders Wallin, Jan-Ove Johansson, Ulf Andreasson, Oluf Andersen, Sara Haghighi, Maria Olsson, Mats Stridsberg, Johan Svensson, Kaj Blennow, Henrik Zetterberg

Abstract

Much is unknown regarding the regulation of Alzheimer-related amyloid-beta protein precursor (AbetaPP)-processing in the human central nervous system. It has been hypothesized that amyloidogenic AbetaPP-processing preferentially occurs in the regulated secretory pathway of neurons. To test this hypothesis we looked for correlations of AbetaPP-derived molecules in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) with chromogranin (Cg) derived peptides, representing the regulated secretion. Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD, N=32), multiple sclerosis (MS, N=50), and healthy controls (N= 70) were enrolled. CSF was analyzed for the amyloid peptides Abeta1-42, Abetax-42, Abetax-40, Abetax-38, alpha-cleaved soluble AbetaPP (sAbetaPPalpha), beta-cleaved soluble AbetaPP (sAbetaPPbeta), and peptides derived from CgB and SgII (Secretogranin-II, CgC). We investigated CSF levels of the protease BACE1, which processes AbetaPP into Abeta, in relation to Cg-levels. Finally, we measured Cg levels in cell media from untreated and BACE1-inhibited SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. CSF Cg levels correlated to sAbetaPP and Abeta peptides in AD, MS, and controls, and to CSF BACE1. Cell medium from BACE1-inhibited cells had decreased CgB levels. These results suggest that a large part of AbetaPP in the human central nervous system is processed in the regulated secretory pathway of neurons.

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