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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebral deposition of beta-amyloid (Abeta) is an invariant event of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We recently described that the brain of aged transgenic mice expressing anti-nerve growth factor (NGF) antibodies (
AD11
mice) show a dramatic neurodegenerative phenotype, reminiscent of AD, which includes neuronal loss, cholinergic deficit, and tau hyperphosphorylation, associated with neurofibrillary pathology. We now report that brains of aged transgenic mice contain large amounts of beta-amyloid plaques and describe their morphology by a variety of approaches. In conclusion, the chronic deprivation of NGF leads to the formation and deposition of Abeta in
AD11
mice, suggesting a direct link between NGF signaling and abnormal processing of amyloid precursor protein.
Mol
Cell Neurosci 2002 Sep
PMID:Beta-amyloid plaques in a model for sporadic Alzheimer's disease based on transgenic anti-nerve growth factor antibodies. 1235 48
1. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is pathologically defined by the deposition of amyloid peptide and neurofibrillary tangles and is characterized by a progressive loss of cognition and memory function, due to marked cortical cholinergic depletion. 2. Cholinergic cortical innervation is provided by basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. The neurotrophin Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) promotes survival and differentiation of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. 3. This assertion has been at the basis of the hypothesis developed in the last 20 years, whereby NGF deprivation would be one of the factor involved in the etiology of sporadic forms of AD. 4. In this review, we shall summarize data that lead to the production and characterization of a mouse model for AD (
AD11
anti-NGF mice), based on the expression of transgenic antibodies neutralizing NGF. The AD-like phenotype of
AD11
mice will be discussed on the basis of recent studies that have posed NGF and its precursor pro-NGF back to the stage of AD-like neurodegeneration, showing the involvement of the precursor pro-NGF in one of the cascades leading to AD neurodegeneration.
Cell
Mol
Neurobiol
PMID:On the molecular basis linking Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) to Alzheimer's disease. 1694 23
Biochemical modifications of tau proteins have been proposed to be among the earliest neurobiological changes in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and correlate better with cognitive symptoms than do beta-amyloid plaques. We have recently reported that adenovirus-mediated overexpression of the NH2 26-230aa tau fragment evokes a potent NMDA-mediated neurotoxic effect in primary neuronal cultures. In order to assess whether such N-terminal tau fragment(s) are indeed produced during apoptosis or neurodegeneration in vivo, we attempted to ascertain their presence in cell and animal models using an anti-tau antibody directed against the N-terminal sequence of human protein located downstream of the caspase(s)-cleavage site DRKD(25)-QGGYTMHQDQ. We provide biochemical evidence that a caspase(s)-cleaved NH2-terminal tau fragment of 20-22 kDa, consistent with the size of the NH2 26-230aa neurotoxic fragment of tau, is generated in vitro in differentiated human SH-SY5Y cells undergoing apoptosis by BDNF withdrawal or following treatment with staurosporine. In addition this NH2-terminally cleaved tau fragment, whose expression correlates with a significant up-regulation of caspase(s) activity, is also specifically detected in vivo in the hippocampus of 15 month-old
AD11
transgenic mice, a model in which a progressive AD-like neurodegeneration is induced by the expression of transgenic anti-NGF antibodies. The results support the idea that aberrant activation of caspase(s), following apoptotic stimuli or neurodegeneration insults, may produce one or more toxic NH2 tau fragments, that further contribute to propagate and increase cellular dysfunctions in AD.
Mol
Cell Neurosci 2008 Jul
PMID:Identification of a caspase-derived N-terminal tau fragment in cellular and animal Alzheimer's disease models. 1851 Dec 95