Neurobiology of Disease (Feb 2007)

Effects of chemical chaperones on oxidative stress and detergent-insoluble species formation following conditional expression of amyloid precursor protein carboxy-terminal fragment

  • Randall L. Woltjer,
  • Wendy McMahan,
  • Dejan Milatovic,
  • John D. Kjerulf,
  • Feng-Shiun Shie,
  • Lisa G. Rung,
  • Kathleen S. Montine,
  • Thomas J. Montine

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 427 – 437

Abstract

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Oxidative stress, protein misfolding, protein complex formation, and detergent insolubility are biochemical features of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We tested the cause-and-effect relationships among these using MC65 human neuroblastoma cells that exhibit toxicity upon conditional expression of carboxy-terminal fragments (CTFs) of the human amyloid precursor protein (APP). Treatments with three different antioxidants (α-tocopherol, N-acetyl cysteine, and α-lipoic acid) or three different compounds (glycerol, trimethylamine-N-oxide, and 4-phenylbutyric acid) that have been described to have a “chemical chaperone” function in promoting protein folding all had a protective effect on MC65 cells and decreased markers of oxidative damage and accumulation of high molecular weight amyloid (A) β-immunoreactive (IR) species. However, chaperones partially reduced detergent insolubility of the remaining Aβ-IR species, while antioxidants did not. These results suggest that protein misfolding associated with overexpression of APP CTFs promotes oxidative stress and cytotoxicity and contributes to formation of detergent-insoluble species that appear unrelated to cytotoxicity.

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