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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
beta-Amyloid accumulates as extracellular aggregates in
Alzheimer
's-afflicted brain tissue, but it also is secreted by healthy tissue, for reasons not yet established. One possibility is that beta-amyloid, which contains a sequence (RHDS) homologous to the cell-binding domain of fibronectin, may modulate integrin function, a possibility supported by previous data from non-neuronal cells (Ghiso et al., Biochem. J., 288 (1992) 1053-1059). The current work shows that functional interaction with beta-amyloid peptides is also supported by integrins in neuronal cells. Experiments used the SH-SY5Y human
neuroblastoma
cell line, which was shown to contain integrins that mediated cell adhesion to substratum-bound fibronectin. Adhesion to fibronectin was partially blocked by synthetic beta-amyloid peptides containing the RHDS sequence. beta-Amyloid sequences adsorbed to substratum themselves were found to mediate cell adhesion, although less effectively than fibronectin. Anti-integrin blocked the peptide-mediated adhesion, at doses commensurate with those blocking fibronectin-mediated adhesion. The data support the hypothesis that beta-amyloid peptides could physiologically, and perhaps pathogenically, modulate the activity of neuronal integrins, important cell surface receptors known to control protein kinase activities, Ca2+ levels, gene expression and organization of the cytoskeleton.
...
PMID:Interaction of beta-amyloid peptides with integrins in a human nerve cell line. 773 99
The ability of beta-amyloid peptides to activate the classical complement cascade and the presence of various complement proteins including the membrane attack complex (C5b-9) on dystrophic neurites in
Alzheimer's disease
brains, raises the possibility that the complement system may contribute to this neurodegenerative disorder. To address this issue, we have studied the effect of complement activation on nerve growth factor (NGF)-differentiated rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells, and on retinoic acid (RA)-differentiated human
neuroblastoma
SH-SY5Y cells. Although incubation of both cell types with human serum resulted in activation of complement, as indicated by iC3b formation, only PC12 but not SH-SY5Y cells were killed by human serum treatment. In contrast, heat-inactivated serum (56 degrees C, 45 min) was not neurotoxic. On SH-SY5Y cells, both PCR amplification and immunocytochemistry demonstrated the presence of CD59, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein that restricts homologous complement activation by inhibiting the formation of the membrane attack complex. The presence of CD59 probably accounts for the inability of human complement to lyse the human cell lines. Indeed, removal of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) rendered SH-SY5Y cells vulnerable to complement attack and eventually led to serum-medicated cell death. Reconstituted C5b-9 was also toxic to both PC12 and PI-PLC-pretreated SH-SY5Y cells. These observations suggest that complement activation can cause neuronal cell death and that this process is regulated by homologous restriction.
...
PMID:Complement-mediated neurotoxicity is regulated by homologous restriction. 774 16
Recent studies showed that the
Alzheimer
amyloid precursor (APP) occurs as the core protein of a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (appican) in C6 glioma cells. In the present study we show that appican is present in both human and rat brain tissue. Cortical rat brain cell cultures were used to identify appican-producing cells. Soluble secreted and cell-associated appican was produced by mixed glial cultures but not by primary neuronal cultures. Among the three major glial cell types, astrocytes produced high levels of appican, while oligodendrocytes failed to produce any. Only low levels of this molecule were occasionally detected in microglial cultures. Expression of appican in astrocyte cultures was regulated by the composition of the growth media. N2a
neuroblastoma
cells also produced appican; however, treatment with dibutyryl cAMP which promotes neuronal differentiation in these cells inhibited its production without inhibiting synthesis of APP. In contrast to the restricted expression of appican, APP was present in all cultures, and its production was independent of appican synthesis. Neuronal cultures produced mainly APP695 while glial cultures produced the Kunitz type protease inhibitor containing APP. The astrocyte-specific expression of appican suggests a function distinct from the function of APP. Brain appicans may play a role in the development of
Alzheimer disease
neuropathology.
...
PMID:The Alzheimer amyloid precursor proteoglycan (appican) is present in brain and is produced by astrocytes but not by neurons in primary neural cultures. 774 33
beta-Amyloid peptide (A beta), a proteolytic fragment of the beta-amyloid precursor protein, is a major component of senile plaques in the brain of
Alzheimer's disease
patients. This neuropathological feature is accompanied by increased neuronal cell loss in the brain and there is evidence that A beta is directly neurotoxic. In the present study reduced cell viability in four different
neuroblastoma
cell types was observed after treatment with human A beta 1-42 for 1 day. Of the cell types tested rat PC12 and human IMR32 cells were most susceptible to A beta toxicity. Chromosomal condensation and fragmentation of nuclei were seen in PC12, NB2a, and B104 cells but not in IMR32 cells irrespective of their high sensitivity to A beta. Electrophoretic analysis of cellular DNA confirmed internucleosomal DNA fragmentation typical for apoptosis in all cell types except IMR32. These findings suggest that the form of A beta-induced cell death (necrosis or apoptosis) may depend on the cell type.
...
PMID:Apoptotic cell death induced by beta-amyloid 1-42 peptide is cell type dependent. 779 Aug 74
The amyloid precursor protein (APP) undergoes abnormal metabolism in
Alzheimer's disease
, resulting in the accumulation of beta A4 amyloid in the brain. Normal APP metabolism includes the release of a truncated form (sAPP) which has been cleaved at the alpha-secretase site within the beta A4 amyloidogenic domain. However, intact forms of beta A4 protein may also be generated by the beta- and gamma-secretases. Soluble forms of beta A4 have been detected in various cell lines and in cerebrospinal fluid. Previous studies of protein kinase C activation have suggested a reciprocal relationship between sAPP secretion and beta A4 production and release. We find that phorbol ester activation of protein kinase C in untransfected SH-SY5Y
neuroblastoma
cells increases the release of sAPP without affecting beta A4 secretion. We provide further evidence for intracellular beta A4 production. Treatment of SY5Y cells with the protease inhibitor phosphoramidon results in a 2-fold increase in beta A4 secretion and an increase in the amount of beta A4 recovered from cell lysates, yet it does not affect sAPP secretion. The protease inhibitors thiorphan and N-[(RS)-2-carboxy-3-phenylpropanoyl]-L-leucine had no effect on beta A4 or sAPP secretion. The lysosomotropic agents chloroquine and NH4Cl decreased beta A4 secretion, providing additional evidence for the involvement of intracellular acidic compartments in the production of beta A4. Our results therefore demonstrate a double dissociation between the secretion of sAPP and beta A4 in the SH-SY5Y cell line. The effect of phosphoramidon supports previous studies which show that metalloproteases are involved in the biogenesis of beta A4.
...
PMID:Intracellular production of beta A4 amyloid of Alzheimer's disease: modulation by phosphoramidon and lack of coupling to the secretion of the amyloid precursor protein. 779 22
C1 inhibitor was identified in human brain tissue by Western blotting and by immunohistochemistry using multiple antibodies to the native protein. The presence of C1 inhibitor mRNA was identified by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis of brain mRNA extracts. The mRNA was also detected in cultured postmortem human microglia and in the IMR-32 human
neuroblastoma
cell line. Immunohistochemically, the native protein was detected in residual serum of capillaries and pyramidal neurons of both control and
Alzheimer disease
cases, as well as in occasional senile plaques of
Alzheimer
tissue. The reacted protein was detected on dystrophic neurites and neuropil threads in
Alzheimer
tissue by 4C3 monoclonal antibody, which recognizes a neoepitope following suicide inhibition. These data indicate that C1 inhibitor, a regulatory molecule controlling multiple inflammatory proteolytic cascades, is produced in normal brain. In
Alzheimer disease
, C1 inhibitor undergoes a prominent reaction in abnormal neuronal processes, such as dystrophic neurites and neuropil threads.
...
PMID:Complement C1 inhibitor is produced by brain tissue and is cleaved in Alzheimer disease. 779 55
Protease nexin I (PNI) is a member of the family of serine protease inhibitors (serpins) that have been shown to promote neurite outgrowth in vitro from different neuronal cell types. These include
neuroblastoma
cells, hippocampal neurons, and sympathetic neurons. Free PNI protein is markedly decreased in various anatomical brain regions, including hippocampus, of patients with
Alzheimer disease
. Here, we report that PNI rescued spinal motoneurons during the period of naturally occurring (programmed) cell death in the chicken in a dose-dependent fashion. Furthermore, PNI prevented axotomy-induced spinal motoneuron death in the neonatal mouse. The survival effect of PNI on motoneurons during the period of programmed cell death was not associated with increased intramuscular nerve branching. PNI also significantly increased the nuclear size of motoneurons during the period of programmed cell death and prevented axotomy-induced atrophy of surviving motoneurons. These results are consistent with the possible role of PNI as a neurotrophic agent. They also support the idea that serine proteases or, more precisely, the balance of proteases and serpins may be involved in regulating the fate of neuronal cells during development.
...
PMID:A serine protease inhibitor, protease nexin I, rescues motoneurons from naturally occurring and axotomy-induced cell death. 784 74
The beta amyloid peptide which accumulates within the brains of patients with
Alzheimer's disease
(AD) is proteolytically derived from a precursor protein (beta PP). We established and characterized four stably transformed human
neuroblastoma
cell lines which conditionally expressed a partial beta PP fusion protein (amino-17 residues+carboxyl-99 residues; S beta C). Conditional expression of S beta C was achieved using a tetracycline-responsive promoter system. Expression of this fusion protein in one of the cell lines resulted in pronounced cytotoxicity. Addition of n6,O2'-dibutyryl adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate and/or fetal bovine serum to the culture medium of this cell line further elevated the level of S beta C expression and enhanced the associated cytotoxicity. Conditioned medium, acquired from cells expressing S beta C, was not cytotoxic. These findings suggest that modulation of beta PP expression and/or metabolism can have cytotoxic consequences. This is the first report of cytotoxic effects mediated by conditional expression of a beta PP derivative. This immortal cell line provides a unique opportunity to screen for complementary DNAs which suppress this toxicity. Such cDNAs could help elucidate the processes underlying S beta C mediated cytotoxicity which in turn could further our understanding of the pathogenesis of AD and could also provide additional candidate genes for various forms of familial AD.
...
PMID:Cytotoxicity mediated by conditional expression of a carboxyl-terminal derivative of the beta-amyloid precursor protein. 785 49
In
Alzheimer disease (AD)
the microtubule associated protein (MAP) tau is hyperphosphorylated at several sites. In the present study, like AD tau, tau in the human
neuroblastoma
SH-SY5Y was found to be hyperphosphorylated, at Ser-199/202, Thr-231, Ser-396 and Ser-404. However, in contrast to AD, the tau in SY5Y cells was not hyperphosphorylated at Ser-235 and there was only one tau isoform. Quantitative analysis revealed that approximately 80% of the SY5Y-tau was phosphorylated at Ser-199/202. The phosphorylated tau was deposited in perikarya and processes of the cells whereas most of the unphosphorylated (at Ser-199/202) tau was localized in the nucleus. Tau from the cell lysates did not bind to taxol-stabilized microtubules. In contrast, MAP1b and MAP2 from cell lysates bound to stabilized microtubules in vitro and were associated to the microtubule network in situ. Phosphorylation of tau at high levels, its inactivity with microtubules and its accumulation in SY5Y cells provide for the first time a cell model of cytoskeletal changes seen in AD.
...
PMID:Abnormally phosphorylated tau in SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. 787
The present study investigated expression and processing of amyloid precursor protein by neuronally differentiated IMR-32
neuroblastoma
cells. APP mRNA in these cells was found to consist of approximately 58% APP695, 38% APP751, and < 4% APP770. APP-immunoreactive bands detected in western blots of cellular protein extracts were only detected by anti-APP antibodies to peptides with strong homology to APLP2, suggesting that these bands represent APP-like proteins and not APP itself. This result suggests that previous studies claiming immunodetection of cellular forms of APP may have to be re-evaluated. Four main species of C-terminal truncated, secreted APP were detected in blots of protein extracts from medium conditioned by these cells. The immunoreactive profile of these bands suggested a cleavage site N-terminal to the Lys16-Leu17 bond of alpha-secretase. This, together with differences in number and molecular mass of APP-immunoreactive bands between secreted APP from IMR-32 cells and that from the commonly used PC-12 cells, suggests differences in APP processing between these two neuronally differentiated cell lines. In theory, IMR-32 cells being of human neuronal origin may be a more appropriate cell line to study APP-processing in relation to
Alzheimer's disease
than the rat phaeochromocytoma PC-12 cell line. Therefore, these detected differences warrant further investigation. Additionally IMR-32 cells under certain tissue culture conditions can form intracellular fibrillary material that reacts with anti-PHF specific antibodies. Neuronally differentiated IMR-32 cells could therefore be used as a model system to investigate possible interactions between APP-processing and PHF formation.
...
PMID:Human IMR-32 neuroblastoma cells as a model cell line in Alzheimer's disease research. 788 25
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