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Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station

Toxic amyloid beta oligomers (AβOs) are known to accumulate in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and in animal models of AD. Their structure is heterogeneous, and they are found in both intracellular and extracellular milieu. When given to CNS cultures or injected ICV into non-human primates and other non-tr...

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Autores principales: DiChiara, Thomas, DiNunno, Nadia, Clark, Jeffrey, Bu, Riana Lo, Cline, Erika N., Rollins, Madeline G., Gong, Yuesong, Brody, David L., Sligar, Stephen G., Velasco, Pauline T., Viola, Kirsten L., Klein, William L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: YJBM 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5369044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28356893
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author DiChiara, Thomas
DiNunno, Nadia
Clark, Jeffrey
Bu, Riana Lo
Cline, Erika N.
Rollins, Madeline G.
Gong, Yuesong
Brody, David L.
Sligar, Stephen G.
Velasco, Pauline T.
Viola, Kirsten L.
Klein, William L.
author_facet DiChiara, Thomas
DiNunno, Nadia
Clark, Jeffrey
Bu, Riana Lo
Cline, Erika N.
Rollins, Madeline G.
Gong, Yuesong
Brody, David L.
Sligar, Stephen G.
Velasco, Pauline T.
Viola, Kirsten L.
Klein, William L.
author_sort DiChiara, Thomas
collection PubMed
description Toxic amyloid beta oligomers (AβOs) are known to accumulate in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and in animal models of AD. Their structure is heterogeneous, and they are found in both intracellular and extracellular milieu. When given to CNS cultures or injected ICV into non-human primates and other non-transgenic animals, AβOs have been found to cause impaired synaptic plasticity, loss of memory function, tau hyperphosphorylation and tangle formation, synapse elimination, oxidative and ER stress, inflammatory microglial activation, and selective nerve cell death. Memory loss and pathology in transgenic models are prevented by AβO antibodies, while Aducanumab, an antibody that targets AβOs as well as fibrillar Aβ, has provided cognitive benefit to humans in early clinical trials. AβOs have now been investigated in more than 3000 studies and are widely thought to be the major toxic form of Aβ. Although much has been learned about the downstream mechanisms of AβO action, a major gap concerns the earliest steps: How do AβOs initially interact with surface membranes to generate neuron-damaging transmembrane events? Findings from Ohnishi et al (PNAS 2005) combined with new results presented here are consistent with the hypothesis that AβOs act as neurotoxins because they attach to particular membrane protein docks containing Na/K ATPase-α3, where they inhibit ATPase activity and pathologically restructure dock composition and topology in a manner leading to excessive Ca++ build-up. Better understanding of the mechanism that makes attachment of AβOs to vulnerable neurons a neurotoxic phenomenon should open the door to therapeutics and diagnostics targeting the first step of a complex pathway that leads to neural damage and dementia.
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spelling pubmed-53690442017-03-29 Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station DiChiara, Thomas DiNunno, Nadia Clark, Jeffrey Bu, Riana Lo Cline, Erika N. Rollins, Madeline G. Gong, Yuesong Brody, David L. Sligar, Stephen G. Velasco, Pauline T. Viola, Kirsten L. Klein, William L. Yale J Biol Med Original Contribution Toxic amyloid beta oligomers (AβOs) are known to accumulate in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and in animal models of AD. Their structure is heterogeneous, and they are found in both intracellular and extracellular milieu. When given to CNS cultures or injected ICV into non-human primates and other non-transgenic animals, AβOs have been found to cause impaired synaptic plasticity, loss of memory function, tau hyperphosphorylation and tangle formation, synapse elimination, oxidative and ER stress, inflammatory microglial activation, and selective nerve cell death. Memory loss and pathology in transgenic models are prevented by AβO antibodies, while Aducanumab, an antibody that targets AβOs as well as fibrillar Aβ, has provided cognitive benefit to humans in early clinical trials. AβOs have now been investigated in more than 3000 studies and are widely thought to be the major toxic form of Aβ. Although much has been learned about the downstream mechanisms of AβO action, a major gap concerns the earliest steps: How do AβOs initially interact with surface membranes to generate neuron-damaging transmembrane events? Findings from Ohnishi et al (PNAS 2005) combined with new results presented here are consistent with the hypothesis that AβOs act as neurotoxins because they attach to particular membrane protein docks containing Na/K ATPase-α3, where they inhibit ATPase activity and pathologically restructure dock composition and topology in a manner leading to excessive Ca++ build-up. Better understanding of the mechanism that makes attachment of AβOs to vulnerable neurons a neurotoxic phenomenon should open the door to therapeutics and diagnostics targeting the first step of a complex pathway that leads to neural damage and dementia. YJBM 2017-03-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5369044/ /pubmed/28356893 Text en Copyright ©2017, Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC BY-NC license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. You may not use the material for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Contribution
DiChiara, Thomas
DiNunno, Nadia
Clark, Jeffrey
Bu, Riana Lo
Cline, Erika N.
Rollins, Madeline G.
Gong, Yuesong
Brody, David L.
Sligar, Stephen G.
Velasco, Pauline T.
Viola, Kirsten L.
Klein, William L.
Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station
title Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station
title_full Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station
title_fullStr Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station
title_full_unstemmed Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station
title_short Alzheimer’s Toxic Amyloid Beta Oligomers: Unwelcome Visitors to the Na/K ATPase alpha3 Docking Station
title_sort alzheimer’s toxic amyloid beta oligomers: unwelcome visitors to the na/k atpase alpha3 docking station
topic Original Contribution
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5369044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28356893
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