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Scavenger receptor CD36 is essential for the cerebrovascular oxidative stress and neurovascular dysfunction induced by amyloid-beta.


ABSTRACT: Increasing evidence indicates that cerebrovascular dysfunction plays a pathogenic role in Alzheimer's dementia (AD). Amyloid-? (A?), a peptide central to the pathogenesis of AD, has profound vascular effects mediated, for the most part, by reactive oxygen species produced by the enzyme NADPH oxidase. The mechanisms linking A? to NADPH oxidase-dependent vascular oxidative stress have not been identified, however. We report that the scavenger receptor CD36, a membrane glycoprotein that binds A?, is essential for the vascular oxidative stress and neurovascular dysfunction induced by A?1-40. Thus, topical application of A?1-40 onto the somatosensory cortex attenuates the increase in cerebral blood flow elicited by neural activity or by endothelium-dependent vasodilators in WT mice but not in CD36-null mice (CD36(0/0)). The cerebrovascular effects of infusion of A?1-40 into cerebral arteries are not observed in mice pretreated with CD36 blocking antibodies or in CD36(0/0) mice. Furthermore, CD36 deficiency prevents the neurovascular dysfunction observed in transgenic mice overexpressing the Swedish mutation of the amyloid precursor protein Tg2576 despite elevated levels of brain A?1-40. CD36 is also required for the vascular oxidative stress induced by exogenous A?1-40 or observed in Tg2576 mice. These observations establish CD36 as a key link between A?1-40 and the NADPH oxidase-dependent vascular oxidative stress underlying the neurovascular dysfunction and suggest that CD36 is a potential therapeutical target to counteract the cerebrovascular dysfunction associated with A?.

SUBMITTER: Park L 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3064396 | biostudies-other | 2011 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Scavenger receptor CD36 is essential for the cerebrovascular oxidative stress and neurovascular dysfunction induced by amyloid-beta.

Park Laibaik L   Wang Gang G   Zhou Ping P   Zhou Joan J   Pitstick Rose R   Previti Mary Lou ML   Younkin Linda L   Younkin Steven G SG   Van Nostrand William E WE   Cho Sunghee S   Anrather Josef J   Carlson George A GA   Iadecola Costantino C  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20110307 12


Increasing evidence indicates that cerebrovascular dysfunction plays a pathogenic role in Alzheimer's dementia (AD). Amyloid-β (Aβ), a peptide central to the pathogenesis of AD, has profound vascular effects mediated, for the most part, by reactive oxygen species produced by the enzyme NADPH oxidase. The mechanisms linking Aβ to NADPH oxidase-dependent vascular oxidative stress have not been identified, however. We report that the scavenger receptor CD36, a membrane glycoprotein that binds Aβ, i  ...[more]

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