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Alzheimer's amyloid-? oligomers rescue cellular prion protein induced tau reduction via the Fyn pathway.


ABSTRACT: Amyloid-? (A?) and tau are the pathogenic hallmarks in Alzheimer's disease (AD). A? oligomers are considered the actual toxic entities, and the toxicity relies on the presence of tau. Recently, A? oligomers have been shown to specifically interact with cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) where the role of PrP(C) in AD is still not fully understood. To investigate the downstream mechanism of PrP(C) and A? oligomer interaction and their possible relationships to tau, we examined tau expression in human neuroblastoma BE(2)-C cells transfected with murine PrP(C) and studied the effect under A? oligomer treatment. By Western blotting, we found that PrP(C) overexpression down-regulated tau protein and A? oligomer binding alleviated the tau reduction induced by wild type but not M128V PrP(C), the high AD risk polymorphic allele in human prion gene. PrP(C) lacking the A? oligomer binding site was incapable of rescuing the level of tau reduction. Quantitative RT-PCR showed the PrP(C) effect was attributed to tau reduction at the transcription level. Treatment with Fyn pathway inhibitors, Fyn kinase inhibitor PP2 and MEK inhibitor U0126, reversed the PrP(C)-induced tau reduction and A? oligomer treatment modulated Fyn kinase activity. The results suggested Fyn pathway regulated A?-PrP(C)-tau signaling. Overall, our results demonstrated that PrP(C) down-regulated tau via the Fyn pathway and the effect can be regulated by A? oligomers. Our study facilitated the understanding of molecular mechanisms among PrP(C), tau, and A? oligomers.

SUBMITTER: Chen RJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3778425 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Alzheimer's amyloid-β oligomers rescue cellular prion protein induced tau reduction via the Fyn pathway.

Chen Rong-Jie RJ   Chang Wei-Wei WW   Lin Yu-Chun YC   Cheng Pei-Lin PL   Chen Yun-Ru YR  

ACS chemical neuroscience 20130718 9


Amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau are the pathogenic hallmarks in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Aβ oligomers are considered the actual toxic entities, and the toxicity relies on the presence of tau. Recently, Aβ oligomers have been shown to specifically interact with cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) where the role of PrP(C) in AD is still not fully understood. To investigate the downstream mechanism of PrP(C) and Aβ oligomer interaction and their possible relationships to tau, we examined tau expression in huma  ...[more]

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