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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 276, Issue 26, 23511-23517, June 29, 2001
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-Amyloid and Carboxyl-terminal Fragment of
Alzheimer's Amyloid Precursor Protein on the Production of the Tumor
Necrosis Factor-
and Matrix Metalloproteinase-9 by Human Monocytic
THP-1*
§¶,
,
,
, and
From the Departments of
Microbiology and
Ophthalmology, College of Medicine, Division of Molecular
Biology and § Neuroscience, Medical Research Center, Ewha
Womans University, 911-1, Mok-6-dong, Yangcheonku, Seoul, 158-056, Korea and the ** Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine,
National Creative Research Initiative Center for Alzheimer's Dementia
and Neuroscience Research Institute, MRC, Seoul National University,
Seoul 110-799, South Korea
Received for publication, October 17, 2000, and in revised form, April 3, 2001
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ABSTRACT |
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To explore the direct role of
The Alzheimer's disease
(AD)1 brain is characterized
by selective neuronal loss, neurofibrillary tangles, and abundant
extracellular deposits of insoluble A number of studies have reported that A Early association of activated microglial cells and reactive astrocytes
in senile plaques and the appearance of inflammatory markers indicate a
state of chronic inflammation in AD. The neuropathological significance
of inflammatory response is strongly supported by multiple
epidemiological studies demonstrating that patients taking anti-inflammatory drugs have a decreased risk of developing AD (15).
Indeed, patients with AD exhibited increased levels of proinflammatory
cytokines that have increased expression on activated microglia in the
vicinity of senile plaque (16). In particular, tumor necrosis
factor- The present study therefore aims to investigate the critical role of
A Preparation of CT105 and A Cell Culture and Treatment for Preparation of Conditioned
Medium--
The human monocytic cell line THP-1 used was obtained from
ATCC (Manassas, VA) and maintained in RPMI 1640 containing 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum as described previously (31). THP-1,
a mononuclear cell line of human origin, has been widely used as a
model of human monocytes/macrophages or microglia not only because of
its functional and morphological similarities, including its capacity
to activate signal transduction pathways (23, 24), but also because of
functional differences in the metabolism of rodent and human microglial
cells (32). Confluent THP-1 cells suspended in serum-free RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with glucose (0.5%) were seeded into 24-well
culture plates (~5 × 105/well) and incubated for
2 h at 37 °C before stimulation. The cells were stimulated by
the addition of CT105 or A Measurement of TNF- Measurement of TNF- Zymographic Analysis--
The gelatinolytic activities in the
cell-free supernatants normalized for equal amounts of protein were
determined by zymography with gelatin according to previously published
methods (35). The clear bands on the zymograms were photographed as
negatives (Polaroid 665 film), and the signals were quantified by
densitometric scanning using UltroScan XL laser densitometer to
determine the intensity of the MMP activity. The arbitrary
densitometric units were expressed or converted to a fold of the
response of the PBS-treated controls for each individual experiment.
Western Blot Analysis--
The proteins in conditioned medium
were separated by 10% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and then
transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes. The blots were
blocked by incubation with 5% nonfat dry milk in Tris-buffered saline
containing 0.15% Tween 20 for 2 h. The blots were then probed for
2 h with mouse monoclonal IgG antibodies specific for MMP-9
(Oncogene Science, Cambridge, MA; diluted 1:1000) followed by
incubation for 1 h with a goat anti-mouse IgG conjugated with
horseradish peroxidase (diluted 1:3000; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
The proteins were visualized using an enhanced ECL Western blotting
detection system.
Data Analysis--
Data are expressed as the mean ± S.D.
and were analyzed by two-tailed Student's t test for
unpaired observations and analysis of variance in order to study the
relationship between the different variables. Values of
p < 0.05 were considered to be significant.
Stimulation of TNF- Dose- and Time-dependent Effects on TNF- Transcriptional Control of TNF- Stimulation of MMP-9 Production by CT105 or
A Evidence for the Role of Endogenous TNF- Effects of Protein Kinase Inhibitors on CT105 or
A Previously, we have reported that A These A IFN- The present study demonstrates that CT105 or A The activation of various components of the signal transduction pathway
linked to the inflammatory responses leads to the synthesis of numerous
proinflammatory species. Recent studies demonstrate that activation of
MAPK pathways in response to A Taken together, these results suggest that CT105 or A
-amyloid (A
) and carboxyl-terminal fragments of amyloid precursor
protein in the inflammatory processes possibly linked to
neurodegeneration associated with Alzheimer's disease, the effects of
the 105-amino acid carboxyl-terminal fragment (CT105)
of amyloid precursor protein on the production of tumor necrosis
factor-
(TNF-
) and matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) were
examined in a human monocytic THP-1 cell line and compared with that of
A
. CT105 elicited a marked increase in TNF-
and MMP-9 production in the presence of interferon-
in a
dose- and time-dependent manner. Similar patterns were
obtained with A
despite its low magnitude of induction. Autocrine
TNF-
is likely to be a main mediator of the induction of MMP-9
because the neutralizing antibody to TNF-
inhibits MMP-9 production. Genistein, a specific inhibitor of tyrosine kinase, dramatically diminished both TNF-
secretion and subsequent MMP-9 release in response to CT105 or A
. Furthermore, PD98059 and
SB202190, specific inhibitors of ERK or p38 MAPK respectively,
efficiently suppressed CT105-induced effects whereas only
PD98059 was effective at reducing A
-induced effects. Our
results suggest that CT105 in combination with
interferon-
might serve as a more potent activator than A
in
triggering inflammatory processes and that both tyrosine kinase and
MAPK signaling pathways may represent potential therapeutic targets for
the control of Alzheimer's disease progression.
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INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
-amyloid protein (A
), which
is a primary constituent of senile plaque (1). Several mutations of
amyloid precursor protein (APP) around the A
domain in certain types of early onset familial AD support its causal role in the pathogenesis of AD, and extensive studies have implicated A
in neurodegeneration (2, 3). An earlier report suggests that A
, a 39-43 amino acid
product derived from APP, may not be the sole active component involved
in the pathogenesis of AD (4). Therefore, the potential effects of
other cleavage products of APP need to be explored.
-bearing carboxyl-terminal
fragments (CTs) have been found not only in senile plaques, paired
helical filaments, and brain microvessels of AD patients but also in
the white matter of Down's syndrome (DS) brains (5-7). Evidence for
correlating CTs with neurodegeneration has come from cell
transplantation models, transgenic mice, and the investigation of
postmortem brains (8-11). Furthermore, a recombinant carboxyl-terminal fragment bearing the full-length A
(CT105) elicited
greater neurotoxic potency than A
on cultured neuronal cells and on
memory deficiencies and neuropathological changes in mice (12, 13).
Meanwhile, a recent study (14) reported that CT had a proapototic
effect on N2a cells and that its cytotoxic properties might be entirely caused by the generation and release of CT31, which appears
to amplify the cell death paradigm. These findings together implicate that CT itself may be an alternative contributing factor to the neurodegeneration processes in vivo.
(TNF-
) has been implicated as a potent neurotoxic agent
that was elevated in brain tissue with plaques and/or the cerebrospinal
fluid of AD patients (17, 18). This immune-mediated pathophysiology is
further evidenced by recent data reporting the elevated level of MMP-9
activity capable of degrading the extracellular matrix in AD
hippocampus (19). Several in vitro studies using either
rodent microglia or human macrophage/monocytes have demonstrated the
capacity of A
to activate these cells in order to generate
inflammatory mediators (20, 21). However, less information is available
on the ability of CTs to induce the inflammatory components, and the
exact molecular mechanisms involved in CT- or A
-specific
inflammatory responses have not been fully identified, though these are
currently receiving attention as key therapeutic targets.
-bearing CTs and the underlying molecular mechanisms in inducing
proinflammatory responses possibly linked to the chronic AD
neuropathology. The capacity of CT105 to induce TNF-
and
MMP-9 in a human monocytic THP-1 cell line as a model for microglia (23, 24) was specifically studied and compared with the values obtained
using A
peptides. The effects of the combined application of
CT105 and interferon-
(IFN-
) were measured because of
recent reports showing the synergistic effect of the combination on
microglia activation in response to A
(20, 25) and the increased
production of IFN-
from the immune cells of AD patients (26). A
possible association between TNF-
production and subsequent MMP-9
release was also analyzed. In addition, specific inhibitors of various signal cascades were tested to identify the molecular mechanisms mediating CT specific proinflammatory responses compared with A
.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
Peptides--
Recombinant CT105 peptide was synthesized
and purified as previously detailed (27). CT105 peptide was
purified by a combination of urea solubilization and ion exchange
chromatography and then subjected to dialysis against 10 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) followed by lyophilization. Previous protein
conformational studies using circular dichroism and immunoblot analysis
confirmed that the CT105 peptide has the
-sheet
structure, which can induce self-aggregates similar to A
derived
from AD brains (28). Protein concentration was determined with
bicinchoninic acid using bovine serum albumin as a standard.
A
-(1-42), A
-(1-40), and A
-(40-1) were purchased from US
peptide (Fullerton, CA) and A
-(12-28) and A
-(25-35) from Sigma,
respectively. As previously described (12, 29), peptides were dissolved
in sterile dH2O at 2 mg/ml and aged by incubation at
37 °C for 6 days, which caused the aggregation states of
CT105 or A
mimic to monomeric, dimeric, and trimeric
components from neuritic and vascular amyloids of AD brain (30).
TNF-
and anti-TNF-
antibodies were purchased from Upstate
Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY) and R & D (Minneapolis, MN),
respectively. IFN-
and other chemicals including genistein were
purchased from Sigma. PD98059 and SB202190 were obtained from
Calbiochem (La Jolla, CA).
peptides for the indicated
times in the presence or absence of INF-
. To determine the effects
of specific enzyme inhibition of CT105- or A
-induced
responses, cells were pretreated with various concentrations of the
protein kinase inhibitors, genistein, PD98059, or SB21090 for 20 min
before stimulation. After incubation with the inhibitors for the
indicated periods, conditioned medium was collected for subsequent
analysis. In the control experiment, a recombinant TNF-
was
preincubated with anti-TNF-
neutralizing antibodies for 2 h at
37 °C with the indicated concentration before addition to the cell cultures.
Levels by an Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent
Assay (ELISA)--
The concentration of TNF-
in the cell culture
medium was measured by ELISA using monoclonal antibodies and the
procedure recommended by the supplier (PharMingen, San Diego, CA). A
standard curve using recombinant human TNF-
was set up for the ELISA
according to the manufacturer's instructions, and the levels of
secreted TNF-
were expressed as pg/ml/106 cells.
mRNA Levels by
RT-PCR--
Total RNA was isolated with the RNAzol B reagent
(Tel-Test) as recommended by the manufacturer. cDNA synthesis and
RT-PCR were conducted to detect expression of human TNF-
and
-actin mRNAs as previously described (29). 2 µg of total RNA
from unstimulated and CT105-stimulated and THP-1 cells in
the presence of IFN-
was reverse transcribed using oligo dTs (Life
Technologies, Inc.) and 4 µl of cDNA was amplified with specific
primers. PCR primers were designed based on the published sequences for
human TNF-
(33) and human
-actin (34) as follows: (a)
human TNF-
: sense, 5'-CAGAGGGAAGAGTCCCCCAG-3'; antisense,
5'-CCTTGGTCTGGTAGGAGACG-3'; probe, 5'-GGCGTGGAGCTGAGAGATAA-3';
(b) human
-actin: sense, 5'-GACAGGATGCAGAAGGAGAT-3'; antisense, 5'-CTAGAAGCATTTGCGGTGGA-3'; probe,
5'-TACTCCGTGTGATCGGCGG-3'. Semiquantitative PCR amplification was
carried out at 94, 60, and 72 °C for 1, 0.5, and 1 min,
respectively, for 30 cycles (for which there was a linear amplification
of each product) using a Perkin-Elmer 9600 Thermal Cycler (Cetus). The
expected sizes for the amplified fragments are 323 bp for TNF-
and
200 bp for
-actin. Nonradioactive Southern blot hybridization with
an internal fluorescein-labeled probe was performed as a specificity
control according to the instruction of the manufacturer (ECL, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). To normalize the values of human TNF-
mRNA levels, human
-actin was amplified in parallel tubes. A portion (20 µl) of the PCR mixture was size separated in 2% agarose gels. The
gel was stained with ethidium bromide and photographed. Signals on the
negative (Polaroid 665 film) were quantified by densitometric scanning
using UltroScan XL laser densitometer (LKB, Model 2222-020) to
determine the ratio of intensity of TNF-
versus
-actin
amplification products.
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RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
Production by CT105 or
A
--
To test whether the interaction of CT105 with
human monocytes could induce the production of proinflammatory and
potentially cytotoxic mediators, we measured the levels of secreted
TNF-
from THP-1 stimulated with CT105, A
-(1-40),
A
-(1-42) or its subfragments for comparison. As shown in
Fig. 1A, CT105 at
a concentration of 100 nM produced a small effect on the
levels of secreted TNF-
after a 20-h incubation (an increase from
about 2 to 11 pg/ml). However, IFN-
markedly potentiated the
accumulation of TNF-
induced by CT105 (an increase from
about 11 to 83 pg/ml). The effect of IFN-
was somewhat lower when
the cells were exposed to A
-(1-40) at 10 µM
concentration, but the levels of TNF-
were considerably higher than
the amounts observed by peptide alone (an increase from about 3.4 to
7.2 pg/ml). The effect of A
-(1-42) closely mimicked that of
A
-(1-40) despite a slightly higher magnitude of induction (an
increase from about 3.8 to 11.7 pg/ml). There was no detectable TNF-
in the medium from untreated THP-1 cells, and IFN-
on its own did
not significantly increase TNF-
secretion. The specificity of the
effects of CT105, A
-(1-40) and A
-(1-42) was
demonstrated by the fact that A
subfragments such as A
-(12-28) or A
-(25-35), and the reverse peptide A
-(40-1) also failed to induce TNF-
secretion under the same experimental conditions.

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Fig. 1.
Effects of CT105 or
A
peptides on TNF-
production. In A, human monocytic THP-1 cells
were incubated in the presence or absence of peptides,
CT105 (100 nM), A
-(1-42) (10 µM), A
-(1-40) (10 µM), A
-(40-1) (10 µM), A
-(12-28) (10 µM), A
-(25-35)
(10 µM) and/or IFN-
(50 ng/ml). After a 20-h
incubation in serum-free RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with glucose
(0.5%), the concentration of TNF-
in the culture supernatants was
measured using a sandwich ELISA kit and expressed in
pg/ml/106 cells. Dose response of TNF-
production by
CT105, A
-(1-40), or A
-(1-42) was also examined by
incubation with increasing concentrations of CT105
(B), A
-(1-40) or A
-(1-42) (D) alone and
CT105 (C), A
-(1-40) or A
-(1-42)
(E) in combination with IFN-
(50 ng/ml) as indicated for
44 h. Data are mean ± S.D. (n = 5). *,
p < 0.05, significantly different from the appropriate
untreated cells.
Secretion
by CT105 or A
--
The dose response was evident
despite the small increases with peptide alone after a 44-h incubation
(Fig. 1, B and D). A significant increase of
TNF-
release was obtained as low as 10 nM
CT105 or at 5 µM A
-(1-40) or A
-(1-42)
in the presence of IFN-
at 50 ng/ml, and further increases were
observed at higher concentrations (Fig. 1, C and
E). Moreover, IFN-
resulted in a
dose-dependent stimulatory effect (active at concentrations as low as 10 ng/ml) and the degree of stimulation was greater at higher
IFN-
concentrations (data not shown). In time course experiments
over a 44-h incubation, TNF-
rapidly accumulated at low levels in
the cell culture supernatant by 2 h and returned to basal levels
in both untreated and only IFN-
-treated THP-1 cells (Fig.
2, A and B).
However, stimulation with CT105 led to a rapid TNF-
secretion as seen in the control at 4 h, and the second phase of
TNF-
secretion was induced at 20 h and increased steadily
thereafter (Fig. 2C). It is noteworthy that IFN-
markedly enhanced this biphasic pattern, starting the second phase of
CT105-induced TNF-
secretion at 10 h (Fig.
2D). Similar patterns were observed with A
-(1-40) or
A
-(1-42) despite the low magnitude of induction as seen in Fig. 1
(data not shown).

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Fig. 2.
Time course of TNF-
production in response to CT105. THP-1 cells
received PBS (A), IFN-
at 50 ng/ml (B) 50 nM CT105 alone (C), or
50 nM CT105 plus 50 ng/ml of IFN-
(D), and were incubated for indicated times in serum-free
RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with glucose (0.5%). The levels of
secreted TNF-
were measured and expressed as described in the legend
to Fig. 1. Data are mean ± S.D. (n = 5).
Production by
CT105--
TNF-
synthesis is controlled at several
levels. Whereas transcriptional, translational, and post-translational
mechanisms play important roles, TNF-
transcription appears to be
the primary regulatory site. To study the mechanism of action of
CT105 on THP-1 monocytes, mRNA levels of TNF-
were
examined by RT-PCR. As shown in Fig. 3
(B and D), CT105 in combination with
IFN-
increased TNF-
mRNA levels in a near parallel fashion
compared with their stimulation of TNF-
secretion (Fig.
2D). Furthermore, this biphasic transcription pattern
preceded the peak in the secretion of TNF-
. In contrast, TNF-
mRNA accumulation was only faintly detected in PBS-treated control
cells at 2 h and decreased to almost below the detection limit at
4 h (Fig. 3, A and C), which was consistent
with the protein data obtained by sensitive ELISA (Fig. 2A).
These observations indicate that CT105-induced TNF-
production basically occurs at the transcriptional level.

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Fig. 3.
Kinetics of TNF-
mRNA expression by CT105. THP-1 cells were
stimulated with CT105 (50 nM) in combination
with INF-
(50 ng/ml) (B) or treated with PBS only
(A). Gene expression of TNF-
and
-actin was analyzed
by RT-PCR as described in "Experimental Procedures" and the
specificity of each amplification product was demonstrated by Southern
blot hybridization on the right. PCR molecular markers
(Promega) indicate 500, 300, or 150 bp on the left side of
each gel. Probing for
-actin was performed for a loading control.
C and D represent the densitometric analysis of
A and B, respectively. Shown is a gel
representative of triplicate experiments.
--
We subsequently investigated whether CT105 or
A
-(1-40) were able to induce the production of MMP-9 by THP-1 cells
because expression of MMPs can be influenced by proinflammatory
cytokines, which have increased expression on microglia in the vicinity
of senile plaques. Using a sensitive zymography method, MMP-9 release was studied in THP-1 cells over a 44-h incubation with the same time
course used in the TNF-
production assay (Fig. 3). We found that the
unstimulated THP-1 cells did faintly display both 92- and 66-kDa
gelatinolytic bands at 20 h (Fig.
4G, lane 1). A
92-kDa gelatinolytic band in supernatants was markedly induced by
TNF-
(consistent with a previous report, Ref. 36) and was confirmed as MMP-9 (Fig. 4G, lanes 2 and 3).
Relative to the untreated control, significantly increased MMP-9
activity (about 2-3-fold increase) was detected in the supernatants of
CT105-stimulated cells at 44 h (Fig. 4; A,
C, and H). Costimulation with CT105
and IFN-
resulted in enhanced MMP-9 release to about 5-6-fold at
44 h (Fig. 4, D and H). MMP-9 production was
not significantly affected by IFN-
incubation (Fig. 4B).
A similar result was also obtained with A
-(1-40) in IFN-
-treated
cells although the degree of potentiation was lower than that achieved
by CT105 (Fig. 4, E and I). Thus, these time course experiments indicate the production of TNF-
preceded MMP-9 release. When exogenous TNF-
was used as a control, the maximal effect on MMP-9 induction was obtained at a concentration of 10 ng/ml with appreciable increases observed at concentrations of
0.01 to 1.0 ng/ml, and higher concentrations of this cytokine did not
increase MMP-9 release further (Fig. 4F).

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Fig. 4.
Time course of MMP-9 release in response to
CT105 or A
-(1-40).
Zymographic analysis was performed using the same cell supernatants
prepared for TNF-
assay in Fig. 3 to determine
CT105-induced MMP-9 activities: A, PBS;
B, IFN-
at 50 ng/ml; C, 50 nM
CT105 alone; and D, 50 nM
CT105 plus 50 ng/ml of IFN-
. In E, MMP-9
activities induced by A
-(1-40) were compared with those by
CT105 in conditioned medium from THP-1 cells treated for
44 h as indicated. F, a dose-dependent
effect of TNF-
on MMP-9 release from THP-1 cells incubated for
44 h. G, the zymographic analysis of gelatinolytic
activities in conditioned medium from THP-1 cells incubated for 20 h without (lane 1) and with TNF-
(1 ng/ml) and the
immunoblot (lane 3) of the 92-kDa gelatinase B for
verification of MMP-9. Bars on the left indicate
the locations of 88 and 68 kDa markers, and the arrowheads
locate MMP-9, respectively. Results are representative of five
independent experiments. H and I, densitometric
analysis of zymograms for A, B, C, D, and E,
respectively. Data are mean ± S.D. (n = 5).
in MMP-9
Production--
To determine whether the endogenous TNF-
produced
in response to CT105 could contribute to the observed MMP-9
induction, we performed further studies in which neutralizing
antibodies to TNF-
were added to THP-1 cells stimulated with
CT105 in the presence of IFN-
. Fig.
5 shows the dose-dependent
inhibition of MMP-9 release by neutralizing antibodies. Anti-TNF-
antibodies at 1 µg/ml concentration over a 44-h time course reduced
MMP-9 induced by CT105 by more than 50%, whereas a 10-fold
lower concentration of anti-TNF-
antibodies (0.1 µg/ml) resulted
in the same level of reduction in the case of A
-(1-40) (Fig. 5;
A, B, and D). As a control,
anti-TNF-
antibodies at 1 µg/ml concentration completely suppressed the MMP-9 induction by exogenous TNF-
, whereas an isotype
matched antibody had little effect (Fig. 5, C and
D).

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Fig. 5.
Effect of anti-TNF-
antibodies on CT105 or
A
-(1-40)-induced MMP-9 release. MMP-9
activities present in conditioned media from THP-1 treated with either
50 nM CT105 (A) or 10 µM of A
-(1-40) (B) in combination with
IFN-
(50 ng/ml) in the absence or presence of increasing
anti-TNF-
antibodies or preimmune IgG (1 µg/ml) for 44 h were
analyzed. In C, TNF-
(1 ng/ml) plus IFN-
(50 ng/ml)
were preincubated for 2 h at 37 °C with the indicated
concentration of anti-TNF-
antibodies before addition to the cell
cultures. Results are representative of four independent experiments.
D, densitometric analysis of zymograms for A, B,
and C. Data are mean ± S.D. (n = 4).
-induced Inflammatory Responses--
To determine whether TK is
involved in the CT105-induced inflammatory response and to
further investigate a possible association between TNF-
production
and subsequent MMP-9 induction, THP-1 was stimulated with
CT105 or A
-(1-40) plus IFN-
in the presence of the
TK inhibitor genistein. Genistein led to a dose-related inhibition of
TNF-
production at the indicated concentrations shown in Fig.
6. 10 µM genistein reduced
CT105 or A
-(1-40)-induced TNF-
secretion by about
60-80% of the level obtained without this agent (Fig. 6A).
Additional experiments were undertaken to determine whether MAPK
downstream of TK is involved in CT105-induced TNF-
production and subsequent MMP-9 release. Both a highly specific MEK
inhibitor (PD98059) and a specific inhibitor of stress-activated p38
MAPK (SB202190) led to the reduction of TNF-
secretion (Fig. 6B). Similarly, PD98059 also dose dependently suppressed
induction of TNF-
production in response to A
-(1-40) (Fig.
6C). In contrast to the above finding, SB202190 had little
effect on this A
-(1-40)-induced inflammatory response (Fig.
6C). Furthermore, down-regulation of TNF-
secretion by
these agents significantly coincided with the reduction of MMP-9,
further confirming the TNF-
-mediated MMP-9 production (data not
shown).

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Fig. 6.
Effects of genistein, PD98059, or SB202190 on
CT105 or A
-(1-40)-evoked
TNF-
secretion. TNF-
in supernatants
of THP-1 incubated with either 50 nM CT105 or
10 µM A
-(1-40) plus IFN-
(50 ng/ml) in the absence
or presence of increasing concentrations of genistein (A),
PD98059 (B), or SB202190 (C) was quantitated by
ELISA as described in Fig. 1. Data are mean ± S.D.
(n = 5-7).
![]()
DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
containing
CT105 elicited stronger potency in mediating neurotoxic
effect than those of any of the A
fragments studied, implicating it
as an alternative toxic element important for the generation of memory
deficit and the neuropathological changes characteristic of AD (12,
13). The mechanism underlying CT105-induced neurotoxicity
appears to involve its nonselective channel-forming activity (37, 38). Our study here clearly demonstrates that CT105 at sublytic
concentrations has a greater capacity for inducing a major inflammatory
cytokine TNF-
production and subsequent MMP-9 release than the A
in the presence of IFN-
from human monocytic THP-1 cells. This
CT105 evoked inflammatory responses dependent on TK and
ERK/p38 MAPK signal cascades and seems to be different from the
A
-induced effect involving the TK and ERK MAPK signaling pathways.
Together, these findings provide the first evidence implicating an
important role for CT105 in the triggering of the
inflammatory process, possibly linked to chronic neurodegeneration in
AD.
-bearing amyloidogenic CTs could be generated from APP
through an endosomal-lysosomal pathway by the action of
-secretase and possibly further cleaved by
-secretase to release A
(6, 39,
40). In contrast, at least two other APP processing pathways produce
fragments with generally opposing properties. In nonamyloidogenic secretory pathway, soluble neuroprotective ectodomain APP (sAPP
) is
released through the action of
-secretase, thus preventing A
formation, and the combined actions of
-and
-secretases yield A
products in the coated pit-mediated endocytosis pathway (40, 41).
CTs with molecular masses of between 12 and 22 kDa have been found in
both the medium and the cytosol of lymphoblastoid cells obtained from
patients with early- or late-onset familial AD (42) and DS (43). In
addition, the carboxyl-terminal peptides have been identified in
plaques, microvessels, and the neurofibrillary tangles in the brains of
AD patients (5-7, 44). Earlier studies showed that A
-bearing CT
fragments were released from several different cells and/or more easily
released from the damaged neurons into the medium or extracellular
fluids (45-48). Moreover, a recent study reported that APP mutations
found in familial AD increased the intracellular accumulation of
potentially amyloidogenic and neurotoxic CTs in neurons (49). Our
previous studies demonstrated that A
-bearing CT was detected in the
medium of cultured PC-12 cells and the intracellular injection of
CT105 into Xenopus oocyte caused the same
channel effects but to a greater extent than the extracellular
application of CT105, suggesting that the extracellular effect reflects intracellular ones (37). Thus, these observations together strongly imply that highly increased levels of CTs
(intracellular or extracellular) may directly cause neuronal cell
death. If not directly causal, CTs released upon cell death could act
as a stimulator perpetuating inflammatory responses such as the
production of TNF-
and MMP-9, which could also indirectly damage
neurons. The far greater effect elicited by CT105 and at
much lower concentration than A
on the induction of these major
inflammatory components suggests synergistic effects with the CT
domains downstream of the A
sequence within CT105. Our
recent results suggest that CT fragments without A
and the
transmembrane domain may also participate in the neuronal degeneration
in AD (50).
, a predominantly proinflammatory cytokine, has been implicated
to be a strong immunological component capable of inducing mononuclear
cells in order to release factors that actually lead to neuronal death
in response to A
(20, 51). Our study clearly demonstrates that
CT105 enhanced TNF-
transcription and secretion in
combination with IFN-
, which primed THP-1 cells for a rapid and
enhanced response to CT105 although the precise mechanism is unknown. This enhancing effect of IFN-
on
CT105-induced TNF-
production from human mononuclear
cells is significantly comparable with recent studies showing its
synergistic effect on the A
-mediated increase of TNF-
production
from the mouse microglia and the BV-2 mouse microglia cell line (20,
51). Consistent with a recent study, A
elicited a modest induction
of TNF-
release from THP-1 cells, although there were some
discrepancies in the patterns of TNF-
induction possibly because of
culture conditions and treatment schemes (21). Thus, CTs as well as
A
might be in part responsible for the elevated level of brain
TNF-
, which has a critical role in the initiation and/or progression
of the inflammatory processes leading to neurodegeneration in AD.
Earlier studies demonstrating dense immunostaining for TNF-
on
microglia associated with amyloid plaques and A
-induced
neurodegeneration accompanied by enhanced TNF-
release further
support this possibility (18, 52). Moreover, these observations
together support the current hypothesis that IFN-
could act as an
inflammatory amplifier aggravating the neurodegenerative process
through priming microglia or monocytes/macrophages for secretion of
proinflammatory cytokines (53, 54). In fact, there have been reports of
hyperproduction of IFN-
in the DS thymus and increased IFN-
in
the sera of DS patients (55, 56). In addition, a recent study has
demonstrated an increased generation and the release of TNF-
and
IFN-
from the immune cells of AD patients (26) further supporting
in vivo relevance of this study and a potential
immunological mechanism associated with AD neuropathology. On the other
hand, recent data reporting that the combination of TNF-
and IFN-
increases A
production inhibiting sAPP secretion further support the
mechanism by which inflammatory components can exacerbate the
fundamental pathology in AD (57).
to a
lesser extent could elicit a significant induction of MMP-9 activity by
human monocytic cells. The main mediator of this response appeared to
be endogenous TNF-
production in response to CT105 or
A
based on the observations that MMP-9 production was significantly
inhibited by TNF-
neutralizing antibodies and TNF-
production
preceded MMP-9 release as well as the observation that the induction
pattern of MMP-9 was mimicked by exogenous TNF-
treatment.
Furthermore, the fact that protein kinase inhibitors could reduce both
TNF-
production and MMP-9 release further supports the idea of
autocrine TNF-
as a key mediator for subsequent MMP-9 induction in
response to either CT105 or A
. The demonstration of
up-regulation of MMP-9 in AD brain tissue and the induction of MMP-9 by
A
in microglia and astocytes as well as macrophages/monocytes
implicates its potential role in disease progression during the chronic
inflammatory state in AD (19, 58, 59). In particular, monocytes
differentiating into microglia-like cells in the vicinity of
cerebrovascular plaques containing CTs as well as A
may produce
several cytokines including TNF-
and other chemokines and
inflammatory mediators (22, 60). Consequently, highly increased MMP-9
activities may cause destruction of cortical and leptomeningeal
vessels, and the penetration of these activated immune cells into the
brain leading to severe tissue damage and a disturbed blood brain
barrier as seen in AD brains (61). Perturbation of blood brain barrier
could in turn allow the passage of INF-
, a cytokine secreted
predominantly by CD4+ lymphocytes, into the brain lesions, subsequently
potentiating the inflammatory effect of TNF-
produced in response to
CTs or A
as observed in this study.
fibrils follow a subsequent
downstream TK-dependent inflammatory signaling event (23,
24). Based on dose-related inhibitory patterns by specific PK
inhibitors revealed in our study, we report that both the TK cascade
and subsequent downstream ERK/p38 MAPK pathways appear to play
important roles in the CT105-mediated production of TNF-
and MMP-9 in human monocytic cells in the presence of IFN-
. In
contrast, inflammatory signaling events occurring in response to A
may be dependent on both the PTK and ERK MAPK pathways and possibly be
independent of the p38 MAPK pathway. Thus, CT105-mediated
activation of the p38 MAPK pathway as well as the potential synergistic
effect of the CT domain downstream of A
sequence within
CT105 may be correlated with the extensive inflammatory
response elicited by CT105 compared with A
. Recent data
reporting that the increased level of active p38 MAPK is associated
with senile plaques in AD brains supports the in vivo relevance of this study (62).
to
a lesser extent can function as an inflammatory stimulator to activate cells of human mononuclear origin and trigger a marked increase in
TNF-
and MMP-9 production in the presence of INF-
. Additionally, CT105- or A
-mediated inflammatory signals were
significantly inhibited by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein and
specific inhibitors of MAPK. These findings support the hypothesis that CT generated from alternative processing and/or excessive production of
APP may be not only an intermediate precursor of neurotoxic A
but
also an alternative contributing factor stimulating inflammatory processes linked to the delayed neurodegeneration in AD. Accordingly, further detailed characterization of the various signaling pathways implicated may hold promise as potential therapeutic targets for slowing progression of the disease.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* This study was supported by Korean Research Foundation Grant KRF-00-F00211 and by Brain Korea 21 Project 1999-2001, Ministry of Health and Welfare (HMP-98-N-6-0002) (to Y. H. C.), and National Creative Research Initiative Grant 2000-2009 from MOST (to Y. H. S.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
¶ To whom correspondence may be addressed: Dept. of Microbiology, College of Medicine, Ewha Womans University, 911-1, Mok-6-dong, Yangcheonku, Seoul, Korea, 158-056. Tel.: 822-02-650-5739; Fax: 822-653-8891; E-mail: younghae@mm.ewha.ac.kr.

To whom correspondence may be addressed: Dept. of Pharmacology,
College of Medicine, National Creative Research Initiative Center for
Alzheimer's Dementia, Seoul National University, Seoul, 110-799, South
Korea. Tel.: 822-740-8285; Fax: 822-740-8285; E-mail: yhsuh@plaza.snu.ac.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, April 16, 2001, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M009466200
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
The abbreviations used are:
AD, Alzheimer's
disease;
A
,
-amyloid;
APP, amyloid precursor protein;
CTs, carboxyl-terminal fragments;
CT105, the 105 amino acid
carboxyl-terminal fragment;
TNF-
, tumor necrosis factor-
;
MMP-9, matrix metalloproteinase 9;
IFN-
, interferon-
;
ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay;
RT-PCR, reverse
transcription-polymerase chain reaction;
TK, tyrosine kinase;
MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase;
ERK, extracellular signal-regulated
kinase;
MEK, MAP kinase-ERK kinase;
bp, base pair(s);
PBS, phosphate-buffered saline.
| |
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