Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2020)

Amyloid Beta Peptide (Aβ<sub>1-42</sub>) Reverses the Cholinergic Control of Monocytic IL-1β Release

  • Katrin Richter,
  • Raymond Ogiemwonyi-Schaefer,
  • Sigrid Wilker,
  • Anna I. Chaveiro,
  • Alisa Agné,
  • Matthias Hecker,
  • Martin Reichert,
  • Anca-Laura Amati,
  • Klaus-Dieter Schlüter,
  • Ivan Manzini,
  • Günther Schmalzing,
  • J. Michael McIntosh,
  • Winfried Padberg,
  • Veronika Grau,
  • Andreas Hecker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9092887
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 9
p. 2887

Abstract

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Amyloid-β peptide (Aβ1-42), the cleavage product of the evolutionary highly conserved amyloid precursor protein, presumably plays a pathogenic role in Alzheimer’s disease. Aβ1-42 can induce the secretion of the pro-inflammatory cytokine intereukin-1β (IL-1β) in immune cells within and out of the nervous system. Known interaction partners of Aβ1-42 are α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). The physiological functions of Aβ1-42 are, however, not fully understood. Recently, we identified a cholinergic mechanism that controls monocytic release of IL-1β by canonical and non-canonical agonists of nAChRs containing subunits α7, α9, and/or α10. Here, we tested the hypothesis that Aβ1-42 modulates this inhibitory cholinergic mechanism. Lipopolysaccharide-primed monocytic U937 cells and human mononuclear leukocytes were stimulated with the P2X7 receptor agonist 2′(3′)-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)adenosine-5′-triphosphate triethylammonium salt (BzATP) in the presence or absence of nAChR agonists and Aβ1-42. IL-1β concentrations were measured in the supernatant. Aβ1-42 dose-dependently (IC50 = 2.54 µM) reversed the inhibitory effect of canonical and non-canonical nicotinic agonists on BzATP-mediated IL-1β-release by monocytic cells, whereas reverse Aβ42-1 was ineffective. In conclusion, we discovered a novel pro-inflammatory Aβ1-42 function that enables monocytic IL-1β release in the presence of nAChR agonists. These findings provide evidence for a novel physiological function of Aβ1-42 in the context of sterile systemic inflammation.

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